"Don't you understand what I'm tryin' to say?
And can't you feel the fears I'm feelin' today. . .
And you tell me over and over and over again, my friend
Ah, you don't believe we're on the eve of destruction."
P. F. Sloan, songwriter, sung by Barry McGuire, "Eve of Destruction," 1965
Boomers had their chance. We were warned.
We heard that song in our youths. The laments of the young are the same or worse now. The Eastern world is still explodin'. We can stay for more than four days in space, but when people return it's the same old place and the same human race, and now its Trump who hates his neighbor but when evangelical Christians and TV cameras are looking on, doesn't forget to say grace.
Rick Millward is a boomer. Most of the people holding political and economic power in this country are boomers, but that is ending. It will be the Millennials' turn to hold the seats of power, but in the meantime their votes were decisive. Millward tells us that they didn't vote for Trump. They voted NO.
Millward is a songwriter, musician, and music producer. He left Nashville and moved to Southern Oregon. He performs primarily in local wine venues.
Guest Post by Rick Millward
A Millennial’s View: Botched Election. Israeli Genocide. Inflation. Student Loans. Climate.
I’m in conversation with a 30-something student, a Ph.D. candidate, self-described Progressive, a Millennial who feels, like many younger Americans, deeply disillusioned with Democrats and outright furious at Boomers. While some Democrats default to finger-pointing and blame-shifting, these younger voters reject policy nuance and strategic justifications that led to the rise of Trump and the GOP. To them, it’s not just a tactical failure, it’s a moral one. The Biden nomination was, they say, a betrayal; only Harris’s presence kept them engaged at all.
As we talk, I struggle to respond. My detailed explanations of geopolitical realities sound empty. Pointing out that Republicans are worse isn’t persuasive; they already know, but find the difference negligible. This isn’t youthful idealism. These voters came of age during 9/11, two recessions, COVID, inflation, and now see a system rigged for the wealthy.
They view Republicans as an unstoppable machine wrecking their future—and Democrats as ineffectual, if not complicit. The American Dream feels dead. Issues they care about, especially climate, are met with delay and denial. They see GOP cultural pandering around gender, performative patriotism, and religious posturing as absurd distractions, and they reject the idea that systemic racism is overblown. Their universities are compromised by investments that betray their values, all while trapping them in decades of debt. Many are incensed by U.S. support for Israel, which they equate with endorsing genocide.
Is it any wonder some are voting “against” their own interests? The shift of younger voters, especially Latino and Black men, toward the GOP may be less about alignment and more a protest vote, which in turn makes things worse. Republicans have the money; Progressives have the numbers. But numbers are powerless if disinformation overwhelms them. And conservative efforts to discredit media fuel a toxic online landscape where truth, lies, and fantasy blur.
The best arguments I muster aren’t convincing:
(1) GOP rhetoric aims to demoralize. Resisting it is essential.
(2) Being Progressive, by definition, requires optimism.
We do agree Democrats need a strategy to counter misinformation with facts, loudly and transparently. To win back youth and minority voters, they must stop taking them for granted and fully embrace issues like climate, justice, and inequality.
As we part, I’m left feeling unable to defend Democrats or my generation. The world is complex, and the torrent of disinformation favors simplicity. Still, that same difficult hope, though grim, requires that we try.
Update: Since writing this, youth support for Republicans is dropping. They’re paying attention.
One of the many problems with a big tent is that sometimes you can’t hear yourself think through the cacophony. Gays and lesbians achieve many rights and then trans pronouns and child surgeries shout out and stop progress. Blacks move forward and then suddenly it’s all reversed because of people screaming DEI. Latin people achieve their place in the American Dream and then are expected to support all newcomers. Educated people and intellectuals try to wade through tough topics like Abundance and are labeled elites. Intergenerational groups can’t agree on who is at fault. Should Democrats change. Of course, change is inevitable. But don’t collapse the tent. We worked too long to erect it.
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