Words are Deeds for Young Americans

I keep wondering why I don’t see or hear young people react to the burden newly imposed on them – and forever – by the implementation of Obamacare. It seems to me that, by and large, they don’t know about it. In addition, they tend to harbor an all-around cynicism of such completeness that they deliberately tune out anything negative as if it were completely expected. I except young Christians from this generalization.

To raise this question is to ask why president Obama continues at such a high level of popularity. (Although his ratings are sinking, they are till high by most standards.) The best answer I can give to this question is so simple, it took me an embarrassingly long time to grasp it. It is that the young, and many others who are not young, think that words are deeds.

Recently, I spent a little talk time with two young women I knew not to be on my side on much of anything. They told me that they supported Obama because he is “pro-women.” They assured me that he resisted the Republicans’ many attempts to abolish “contraception.” (NOT abortion.) They couldn’t name any successful Republican venture against contraception. I interpret this to mean that they may have heard of some speech by some extremist somewhere and considered it a done deed. Both were insensitive to my argument that if they mean by “pro-women,” defending contraception, most relevant decisions belonged to states and are therefore not within Mr Obama’s realm of decision-making.

I am not here dumping on the young and feeble. I was having a meal with these young women because one is a sometimes reading buddy of mine. (A “reading budding” is like a drinking buddy without the hangovers.) The other has a quick intelligence that is so obvious it invades the room she is in like a strong perfume. Neither is a dummy and I am always charmed by their company. But they are preoccupied by many other issues, more personal ones. They satisfy themselves that listening to words makes them politically conscious enough and good citizens, I suspect. And, of course, even in the absence of confirmation bias, they would hear ten of Mr Obama’s well-delivered speeches for one speech from any Republican at all. (“Confirmation bias” is the well-studied tendency to pay more attention to items of information that conform with one’s opinions than with those that diverge from it.)

So, when Mr Obama speaks of improving the economy (five years later and some), his young supporters consider it done. Difficulties finding jobs, or good jobs, stagnating wages, irresponsibly mounting college tuition, rising and absurd mountains of college debts, must come from somewhere else. The more frightening prospect is that the bad economy – started elsewhere but continued by the Obama administration – is becoming the normal state of things for young people who have little memory of happier times.

Here is a tangible example of the new normal. Some dispositions of Obamacare law 2,000 pages-plus drive companies to limit employment to thirty hours a week. Now, consider a reasonably well paid young worker taking home $13/hr. (Taking home). With the new limited work-week, this young worker has to manage to live on about $20,000/year. It can be done, easily in some rural areas , with difficulty in most American cities (except Detroit, of course). In my town of Santa Cruz, rent and utilities would easily eat half of this amount.
Of course, depending on where you live, with that kind of income, you might be eligible for food stamps.

I have seen something like this happen in France. We may have a French disease.

I try hard to think back and I suspect I did the same when I was young. I mean that I confused words with deeds. That plus a strong sense of justice may explain why I was a leftist. It took years and a really good education to get into the habit of looking at the facts behind and after the words. That new custom turned me into a conservative libertarian quickly.

This analysis is all bad news. I hope the young of today are smarter than I was, and quicker. They surely know more than I did; they are closer to the facts if they want to be. I hope I am wrong about mistaking words for facts. Please, tell me that I am.

3 thoughts on “Words are Deeds for Young Americans

  1. Where I’m at – in Westwood, Los Angeles – everybody can see that Obama is awful. The problem is not that we are gullible or don’t listen or have confirmation bias, but that there is a lack of an alternative.

    For all of Obama’s faults, the Republican Party is much, much worse. If, as many hope, the neoconservatives continue to lose election after election to libertarian candidates in the Republican primaries, then this may change.

    But as long as imperialists and demagogues like Chris Christie, George W. Bush and the uber-fascists John McCain and Lindsay Graham continue to wield power in Washington, the Democrats will be the alternative party that smart, passionate young people identify with and vote for.

    Interestingly enough, prior to the illegal, failed invasion and occupation of Iraq in 2003, the GOP and the Democratic Party actually vied for the hearts and minds of the young. When the GOP made the decision to murder innocent brown people abroad for no reason at all, and with no evidence whatsoever, they lost our hearts as well as our minds.

    The fact that imperialists continue to peddle their lies to the gullible and the stupid only serves to strengthen the Left’s grip on the young and the intelligent.

  2. Good debate. For the record, I view the politicians cited by Brandon as pragmatists and altruists who have no core beliefs beyond the acquisition of power that is then used to bend the public, whether they like it or not, in the opposing direction.

    For example, how does one reconcile the insistence on small government and individual rights while working to expand religious influences of the majority within the government and its policies/laws to the point that the impact on people is not an expansion of liberty, but a contraction in other areas that offset the expansion of freedoms felt initially [from taxation for example]?

    Liberty is liberty and changing dictators doesn’t make a bit of difference in the long run. Either we are, constitutionally, a free people, or we are something else. We can’t be both.

  3. For the record, I am 64 years young; so I am outside the demographic under discussion. Take this fact for what it is worth.

Please keep it civil