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Sid Shniad
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Subject: America's New Radicals Attack a System That Ignores Them


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article29287.htm

Information Clearing House
October 03, 2011

Ah, To Be Young And In Hate

America's New Radicals Attack a System That Ignores Them

By Ted Rall

"Enraged young people," The New York Times worries aloud, are kicking off
the dust of phony democracy, in which "the job of a citizen was limited to
occasional trips to the polling places to vote" while decision-making
remains in the claws of a rarified elite of overpaid corporate executives
and their corrupt pet politicians.

"From South Asia to the heartland of Europe and now even to Wall Street,"
the paper continues, "these protesters share something else: wariness, even
contempt, toward traditional politicians and the democratic political
process they preside over. They are taking to the streets, in part, because
they have little faith in the ballot box."

The rage of the young is real. It is justified. It is just beginning to play
out.

The political class thinks it can ignore the people it purports to
represent. They're right-but not forever. A reckoning is at hand. Forty
years of elections without politics will cost them.

Americans' pent-up demand for a forum to express their disgust is so vast
that they are embracing slapdash movements like Occupy Wall Street, which
reverses the traditional tactic of organizing for a demonstration. People
are protesting first, then organizing, then coming up with demands. They
have no other choice. With no organized Left in the U.S., disaffected people
are being forced to build resistance from the ground up.

Who can blame young adults for rejecting the system? The political issue
people care most about-jobs and the economy-prompts no real action from the
political elite. Even their lip service is half-assed. Liberals know "green
jobs" can't replace 14 million lost jobs; conservatives aren't stupid enough
to think tax cuts for the rich will help them pay this month's bills.

The politicians' only real action is counterproductive; austerity and bank
bailouts that hurt the economy. Is the government evil or incompetent? Does
it matter?

Here in the United States, no one should be surprised that young adults are
among the nation's angriest and most alienated citizens. No other group has
been as systematically ignored by the mainstream political class as the
young. What's shocking is that it took so long for them to take to the
streets.

Every other age groups get government benefits. The elderly get a
prescription drug plan. Even Republicans who want to slash Medicaid and
Medicare take pains to promise seniors that their benefits will be
grandfathered in. Kids get taken care of too. They get free public
education. ObamaCare's first step was to facilitate coverage for children
under 18.

Young adults get debt.

The troubles of young adults get no play in Washington. Pundits don't bother
to debate issues that concerns people in their 20s and 30s. Recent college
graduates, staggering under soaring student loan debt, are getting crushed
by 80 percent unemployment-and no one even pretends to care. Young Americans
tell pollsters that their top concerns are divorce, which leaves kids
impoverished, and global warming. Like jobs, these issues aren't on anyone's
agenda.

This pot has been boiling for decades.

In 1996 I published "Revenge of the Latchkey Kids," a manifesto decrying the
political system's neglect and exploitation of Generation X, my age cohort,
which followed the Baby Boomers.

We were in our 20s and low 30s at the time.

Un- and underemployment, the insanity of a job market that requires kids to
take out mortgage-sized loans to attend college just to be considered for a
low-paid entry-level gig in a cube farm, the financial and emotional toll of
disintegrating families, and our fear that the natural world was being
destroyed left many of my peers feeling resentful and left out-like arriving
at a party after the last beer was gone.

Today the oldest Gen Xers are turning 50. Life will always be harder for us
than it was for the Boomers. If I had to write "Latchkey Kids" for today's
recent college grads, it would be bleaker still. Today's kids-demographers
call them Gen Y-have it significantly worse than we did.

Like us, today's young adults get no play from the politicians.

The debts of today's Gen Yers are bigger ($26,000 in average student loans,
up from $10,000 in 1985). Their incomes are smaller. Their sense of
betrayal, having gone all in for Obama, is deeper.

Young adults turned out big for Obama in 2008, but he didn't deliver for
them. They noticed: The One's approval rating has plunged from 75 percent
among voters ages 18-29 when he took office in January 2009 to 45 percent in
September.

Politicians like Obama ignore young adults, especially those with college
degrees, at their-and the system's-peril. Now, however, more is at stake
than Obama and the Democrats' 2012 election prospects. The entire economic,
social and political order faces collapse; young people may choose
revolution rather than accept a life of poverty in a state dedicated only to
feeding the bank accounts of the superrich.

As Crane Brinton pointed out in his seminal book "The Anatomy of
Revolution," an important predictor of revolution is downward mobility among
strivers, young adults whose education and ambition would traditionally have
led to a brighter future.

In February Martin Wolf theorized in The Financial Times that the Arab
Spring rebellions in Egypt and Tunisia owed their success to demographics;
those countries have more young people than old ones. On the other hand
"middle-aged and elderly rig political and economic life for their benefit
in the U.K. [he could also have said the U.S.]: hence the way in which
policies on housing or education finance are weighted against the young."

Right here and right now, though, the young and the old are on the same
side. Though the young are getting screwed the hardest, almost everyone else
is getting screwed too. And with 80 percent unemployment, the young have a
lot of free time to rise up.

(Ted Rall is the author of "The Anti-American Manifesto." His website is
tedrall.com.)

 



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