Millennials: The Most Entitled Generation, Or the Next Great One? Artemus Ward Dept. of Political Science Northern Illinois University

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Use specific reasons and examples to support your opinion.
Advertisements

Unit One: Political Culture, Public Opinion, Political Participation.
Annette Krawczyk Professor Anne-Marie Yerks English Composition 106 Online 30 November 2010.
Social Security System and the Future Challenges Bricey Kepnes, Neil Klinger, Amanda Lafferty, Marcus Kocik.
Unit #1: Political Ideology & Behaviors Part 1: Demographics and Political Identity.
Dr. Tom Harris Professor Emeritus University of Alabama.
RETIRING BABY BOOMERS Esther Kim. U SING THE P ITCHBOOK T EMPLATE Background Information The term "Baby Boomers" refers to the population born between.
SSCG8 Review.
America’s National Debt and Long-Term Outlook An Overview of the Challenge and the Implications for Young People March 2009.
October 27-31, 2013/ N=1,000 Registered “likely” voters / ±3.1% M.O.E. THE GEORGE WASHINGTON BATTLEGROUND POLL A national survey of 1,000 Registered “Likely”
How People Voted The Election of Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives Understand the decision making process for why people vote as they do.
Jefferson Hamilton I want to become president to assure that the state governments have power. I completely disagree with that. National Government should.
st Street, NW, Suite 401  Washington, DC   The Graduate School of Political Management POLITICS FROM A NEW.
Margaret C. Kenski, Ph.D Arizona Opinion Kate Kenski, Ph.D University of Arizona.
Civitas Institute Poll Presentation October 2013.
The Political Spectrum and Political Ideology
 Liberals are on the left side of the political spectrum and tend to favor progress and reform/change.  Conservatives are on the right side of the political.
 The issue with guns is them being in the wrong hands.  Gun laws are very strict but not strict enough.  Residents with household weapons are also.
Social Security 4/26/2012. Learning Objectives Accurately describe the social, economic, and political dimension of major problems and dilemmas facing.
BULLSEYE VOCABULARY UNIT 2. Political Culture, Political Socialization, Particiapation Good Luck on your Test!!!!
TITLE PAGE Charlton Research Company Pulse of the Nation February 4, 2005 Western Association of Chamber Executives.
Date: January 14, 2013 Topic: Political Participation Aim: How do demographics play into participation? Do Now: Multiple Choice Questions. LET’S START.
Poverty: Defined and Explained. Measuring Poverty Government Definition –Recently revised by the Census Bureau to include many of the criticisms from.
Stop Coddling the Super-Rich By WARREN E. BUFFETT New York Times August 14, 2011.
PIVOTAL ELECTIONS IN 2008, 2010, AND 2012 Theda Skocpol USW 31, October 24, 2012.
Public Opinion and Political Action Chapter 6. Introduction Some Basics: Demography The science of population changes. Census A valuable tool for understanding.
THE OLD POST Wednesday, April 4 th, 2012Est Page 1- Allison Janes and Sarah Vestweber are choosen to run for the iWin party. Page 2- How do you vote.
ENGAGING THE NONES. Acknowledgements Peter Tinsley Former President, SLS Brian Harvey Executive Director, CFI on Campus Nick Stancato Affiliate Program.
Politics Politics is a social process through which people and groups acquire, exercise, maintain, or lose power over others. (Sociology) Politics is the.
Civics Review. The Supreme Court decision referred to by the phrase “one person, one vote” made our state governments fairer by…
Congress II 3/19/2012. Clearly Communicated Learning Objectives in Written Form Upon completion of this course, students will be able to: – identify and.
Baseline Public Opinion Research November Figure 1 Overwhelming Support for Poverty Reduction Goal No Significant Difference Between Split Samples.
Public Opinion and Political Action Chapter 6. Introduction Public Opinion – The distribution of the population’s beliefs about politics and policy issues.
Chapter 6 Review. 1. What are crosscutting cleavages.
Professor Angelo J. Gonzales University of Kansas.
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLITICAL ACTION Chapter 6. Introduction Some Basics: Demography: The science of population changes. Census The most valuable method.
Political Culture Political Tolerance & Mistrust of the Government.
America During the Cold War A changing people, nation and time.
Born between the years of 1980 and 2000 The Millennial Generation makes up over 20 percent of the population in United States Millennial Generation Also.
POLITICS, DEFICITS, AND DEBT The social security debate It’s the demography stupid!
18 | Public Economy Voter Participation and Costs of Elections Special Interest Politics Flaws in the Democratic System of Government.
Pp Representatives and Senators. Introduction  The framers of the Constitution conceived of Congress as the center of policymaking in America.
AP GOVERNMENT Chapter 9: Campaigns and Elections The Rules of the Game.
Political Parties Chapter 11. Political Parties –Organized groups with public followings that seek to elect office holders who identify themselves by.
Bull-Bear Party Chicago, Illinois. 1.No rifle, shotgun or handgun may be sold to a minor under 18 years of age, a convicted felon, or a person under indictment.
BASIC ECONOMICS FOR THE CITIZEN. The ECONOMY - a system by which goods and services are produced, sold, and bought in a country or region. The ECONOMY.
The American Family 50 years of change. Change… The American family has undergone tremendous change in the last 50 years. Some argue that family life.
The Legislative Branch
Social Security We will be discussing background, issues, costs, the impact on future, and political viewpoints of major parties. ENJOY! By: Kevin Tosi,
Demography Population Theories Population Explosion.
Interviews with Female College-Aged Voters. “College campuses are home to political discourse that has reflected the dissatisfaction of society for generations.
Political Socialization. Political socialization – The process through which an individual acquires his or her particular political orientations, including.
What is the difference between a one party system and a two party system? Where do you usually find these two systems? A one party system is usually found.
Our National Debt What is our current national debt? How did we get into this situation? What can be done to solve this problem?
Beyond Welfare. Who pays for the Baby Boomers? Moyra Riseborough.
Forms of Political Participation Lobbying is the strategy by which organized interests seek to influence the passage of legislation by exerting direct.
PACs and Fundraising Update 2016 Election Cycle April 13, 2016 Producer: Owen Minott Jr. Editor: Katharine Conlon Director: Afzal Bari.
A. rule of law B. individualism C. equality of results D
How will you vote?.
Political Beliefs and Behaviors
Candidate Profile: Barack Obama
Presidential Primaries Profile
Chapter 7: Population Futures
America During the Cold War
Minor Parties Political Parties.
Political Parties and the United States
Which Media Receive the Biggest Slices of the Ad Spending Pie
Participation & Voting Behavior
Presentation transcript:

Millennials: The Most Entitled Generation, Or the Next Great One? Artemus Ward Dept. of Political Science Northern Illinois University

Millennials (also knows as the Millennial Generation or Generation Y) are the demographic cohort following Generation X. There are no precise dates when the generation starts and ends. Researchers and commentators use birth years ranging from 1980 to about The standard criticism of millennials is that they need to be coddled, they’re naïve and have a profound sense of entitlement. But is it really accurate?

Millennials are more racially diverse than any other generation (40% non-white), young (roughly age 10-25), single (75%), college-educated (50%), libertarian and tolerant, use technology, like music and pop culture, fashion/clothes conscious. They prioritize 1) parenting, 2) marriage, and 3) helping others more than 4) owning a home, 5) living a religious life, 6) having a high-paying career, 7) having lots of free time, and 8) becoming famous.

There is a massive disconnect in the way that millennials see themselves v. the way older generations view them.

On January 8, 2015, RealClearPolitics and Business Insider published an article about millennials, written by two millennials: Ross Pomeroy is the assistant editor of RealClearScience while William Handke is a graduate of Georgetown University and a self-employed entrepreneur. The article quickly went viral with over 1.5 million views and thousands of shares on facebook, twitter, and other social media sites. The title was “The Most Entitled Generation Isn’t Millennials. It’s Baby Boomers” Not surprisingly, millennials overwhelmingly “liked” it. The article follows:

The Most Entitled Generation Isn't Millennials. It's Baby Boomers For the first time in America’s history, an entire generation of her citizens is poorer, more indebted, and less employed than the preceding generations.is poorer, more indebted, and less employed than the preceding generations. That generation is the Millennials – our generation. The culprit, say some social commenters, are Millennials themselves. In this telling, we are a lazy cohort of entitled and narcissistic brats– the proverbial “Generation Me.” But this is a classic case of blaming the victim. The true cause of this unfortunate situation is clear: it’s the economy. The Great Recession stymied economic growth, halted job creation, kept older Americans in the workforce longer, and encouraged younger Americans to continue debt-financed schooling. Moreover, the Great Recession was not merely a one-off calamity – it was a symptom of economic ills long perpetuated and ignored. And the criticism and labels that have been heaped upon Millennials bear much more resemblance to the type of intergenerational stereotyping that has always existed (“Darn kids these days.”) than to any measurable reality.

The truth: The economic tragedy of the Millennial generation was written before many of us had even learned to read – by Baby Boomer parents and grandparents who, at once, genuinely love and care for us, but have also created or perpetuated institutions, policies, and economic realities that have now hobbled us. Our generation has been called “entitled.” We beg to differ. If any generation is entitled, it’s our parents’ and grandparents’ generation: the Baby Boomers. True entitlement is tripling the national debt since the 1980s and using the proceeds to spend lavishly on tax cuts and government programs that primarily provided short-term economic boosts, while refusing to raise the Social Security age of retirement or to reduce benefits, even as the gluttonous program careens toward unsustainability. True entitlement is allowing the reasonable minimum wage that Baby Boomers enjoyed when they were our age to deteriorate while opting to cut taxes on the gains from stocks and bonds that they accrued during periods of debt-driven economic and stock-market surges – creating an economy where wage earners at all income levels, as of 2012, receive a smaller portion of economic output at any time since 1929.

True entitlement is, for decades, enjoying the benefits of the lowest energy costs in the world while refusing to price-in the external costs of carbon emissions, exacerbating the real changes to our planet that pose profound risks to the environment and economy for which Millennials will soon be the primary stewards. These grave consequences were entirely foreseeable – but they happened. Young Americans have been fleeced in order to fund the transient excesses of the old – and yet Milliennials are labeled “entitled” because we were given “participation trophies” and “personal tutors” before we were old enough to vote...?participation trophies Give us a break. Millennials are not entitled. But we are frustrated. We’re frustrated because the same Baby Boomer bloc that created or tacitly perpetuated the policies that have hamstrung Millennials now makes up almost a third of the American voting -aged population and holds nearly two-thirds of the seats of the United States House of Representatives and Senate. This, during a decade-long span when incumbent House and Senate members are richly rewarded for being the most unproductive legislators in U.S. history, respectively winning reelection 94 percent and 87 percent of the time.

Granted, many members of our generation need to learn how to vote every two years, not just every four. And we need to begin to fulfill the civic-minded label - “The Next Great Generation” - which social scientists have bestowed upon us. When we do begin to regularly share our opinions in the voting booth, not just on Twitter, you can be assured that we’ll act to keep this country great. We’ll make the “hard” choices the Baby Boomers have refused to make.social scientists have bestowed Already, we’ve learned how to be fiscally responsible - with the most student debt of any generation in history, we’ve had to. More than any other generation, we eschew expensive possessions like cars and large houses, opting instead for bikes and shared living spaces. Sure, we would like to own all that fancy stuff someday, but we realize that we can’t have everything we want.opting instead for bikes and shared living spaces We know that our government would be better off spending more of our tax dollars on jobs and education, and not just on social security and defense.spending more of our tax dollars on jobs and education, and not just on social security and defense We overwhelmingly recognize that the war on drugs has been an embarrassing waste of money and lives and that anyone should be able to marry whomever they love.war on drugsanyone should be able to marry Perhaps we Millennials are entitled: we seemed to think that Baby Boomer politicians will enact much needed changes while we fiddle with our smartphones. We were definitely wrong on that one.

Millennials (voters age 18-29) are by far the most liberal voters but also by far the least influential voters. They comprised only 13% of voters while older generations (those 45 and older) comprised 65% of voters. Older voters are far more conservative than younger voters. Thus, the failure of Millennials to vote and otherwise participate in elections, cedes those elections to voters and candidates they disagree with which will result in policies they don’t want Midterm Election: Exit Polls

The Potential of Millennials Already Makes Them Influential The day before the House of Representatives was scheduled to vote on a bill to ban abortion after 20 weeks, except in cases of officially reported rape, a group of GOP lawmakers killed the bill. Rep. Rene Ellmers (R-N.C.) led the revolt and said one week before: “I have urged leadership to reconsider bringing it up next week.… We got into trouble last year, and I think we need to be careful again; we need to be smart about how we’re moving forward. The first vote we take, or the second vote, or the fifth vote, shouldn’t be on an issue where we know that millennials—social issues just aren’t as important [to them]." The frustration came after a GOP retreat hosted by demographer Neil Howe, the man credited with coining the term “millennial,” where the party discussed how to appeal to young voters. This example shows how millennials are going to be increasingly important at the ballot box going forward and if the GOP wants to win future elections they are going to have to drop their increasingly unpopular stances on social issues such as opposition to abortion, gay rights, and legalized marijuana.

Conclusion Is it possible that millennials are at once both lazy, spoiled, naïve, and entitled, but also creative/innovative, caring, and smart? Because their potential already makes them influential, imagine what they will do once they start participating in public life? How will they transform America? The World? It is our job, as the “older” generation, to help, empower, and inspire them to become engaged in public life.

References Newhauser, Daniel, “Republican Split on Next Week’s Anti-Abortion Bill Vote,” National Journal, January 16, next-week-s-anti-abortion-bill-vote http:// next-week-s-anti-abortion-bill-vote O’Keefe, Ed, “Abortion Bill Amid Concerns of Female GOP Lawmakers,” Washington Post, January 21, politics/wp/2015/01/21/abortion-bill-in-flux-as-female-gop-lawmakers-raise-concerns/ politics/wp/2015/01/21/abortion-bill-in-flux-as-female-gop-lawmakers-raise-concerns/ Pomeroy, Ross and William Handke, “The Most Entitled Generation Isn’t Millennials,” RealClearPolitics, Business Insider, January 8, millennials_its_baby_boomers_ html ; entitled-generation-isnt-millennials millennials_its_baby_boomers_ htmlhttp:// entitled-generation-isnt-millennials