Just curious...how old are you?
25
All OTHER things remaining equal from the 2000 and 2004 elections - yes, the 18-29 demographic is what got Hussein elected. The majority of the over 30 white vote went GOP, and 98% of the black vote went Democrat.
I was under the impression we were talking about generations; I didn't know we were also narrowing it down to ethnicity. I guess we could also say that white men in the age range of 30-44 who are between 5'8" and 6'2" went GOP by a decided margin, but that's straying from the initial category comparison: age.
The majority of people ages 30-44 (52%) voted for Obama. Approximately 36.3 million people between 30 and 44 voted, and 18.9 million of those voted for Obama. That is around 3 million more than the number of 18-29 year olds that voted for Obama. And, of course, about 23 more million people in the age bracket of 45-64 voted for Obama. That's almost as many 18-29 year olds that voted period. As stated over and over, 18-29 year olds played a part in the election of Obama. No doubt. Everyone who cast a vote for him did. However, to say that we are the sole cause, or to claim that we are even a major or large cause of that is to ignore the fact that more votes came from other age brackets than us. We're not the single generation that screwed things up; multiple generations gave millions of votes to the guy.
Absolutely wrong. As they are the ones who have done it. When I say "progressive policy", I don't literally mean "progress" from an efficiency standpoint - I mean more less "liberal policy" guised as progress.
Then that is where our misunderstanding came in. As a political science major, when I hear progressivism, I don't think about liberal guises; I think about the traditional form of American progressivism that arose beginning in the 1880s.
Functional - yes, life was much more functional then. People did what they NEEDED to do FIRST and not what wanted to do as #1 priority. People had their priorities a lot more straight than now. Sure - let me get that Playstation 3, the newest laptop, a new CD and eat out half the time - while the mortgage payment falls by the wayside. Do you think people did this "back in the day"? NO. People had to eat, so that got up at the crack of dawn to farm. Again, you are taking technological advances the last 100 years and showing me those as the reasons we are more functional now. Thats mixing apples and oranges. One of your examples - Airplanes. Most people take air travel for pleasure(a WANT) not business (functional - a NEED). Most technology we use is for personal convenience. My point was that people did things more out of NEED then. People more things NOW than ever out of WANT. Tell how that is more functional.
Again, this was a misunderstanding on how you're utilizing terminology. When you say something is functional, I think of it as working. If you say something is more functional than something else, then I think of it as working better (or more efficient). All of the items that I mentioned, including airplanes, are more functional than historical means of travel and productivity. To me, the concept of people putting wants before needs would be better categorized as spoiled. And while that is certainly a problem in our society, I'm not so certain that this attitude was created by poor politics beginning in the 1960s. I think our success and overabundance of resources has left us sitting on our laurels, and we always assumed that the jobs would be there, the income would be there, the resources would be there, etc. Hopefully people are now learning otherwise.