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- <text id=93TT2026>
- <title>
- July 19, 1993: Taking Shots at The Baby Boomers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 30
- Taking Shots at The Baby Boomers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A new--and young--breed of social activists issues a call
- to arms
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTOPHER JOHN FARLEY--With reporting by John Dickerson and Alexandra Lange/New York,
- Scott Norvell/Atlanta and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The generation of Americans in their 20s sometimes seems to
- have an image but no impact. They have plenty of cultural signifiers:
- rave parties, Lollapalooza, the underground Riot Grrrl feminist
- movement, that annoying guy in the Burger King ads that you
- just want to slap. But the connections seem to be missing; what
- does it all add up to? The search is on for those who would
- give real meaning to this Virtual Generation.
- </p>
- <p> Candidates are stepping forward. This week in Washington, a
- newly formed group called Third Millennium will release a political
- call to arms titled the Third Millennium Declaration. The group's
- goal is to represent the concerns of people born between 1961
- and 1981. One of the founding members, Douglas Kennedy, 26,
- son of Robert Kennedy, claims the nonpartisan group now has
- about 50 participants in New York City and Washington, along
- with supporters in almost every state. "We've put our finger
- on the tone of who we are as a generation," he says.
- </p>
- <p> A lofty claim, since the 20-to-29 age bracket has so far been
- conceptualized more as a marketing tool than an active social
- force; its members can't even agree on a name. The term "twentysomething"
- dates quickly, while "Generation X" is meaningless to most of
- the people it's meant to describe, according to a recent poll
- by MTV. Nonetheless, the ambitious "declaration" of this hard-to-label
- generation will soon be curling out of fax machines all over
- the U.S. "Like Wile E. Coyote waiting for a 20-ton Acme anvil
- to fall on his head," reads the preamble, "our generation labors
- in the expanding shadow of a monstrous national debt." Baby
- boomers are given a political threat: "We grew up amidst the
- betrayals of Vietnam, Watergate, and Iran-contra. We are witness
- to the highest divorce rate ever...Let the new generation
- in power know we are not only watching, but participating."
- </p>
- <p> The statement offers more rhetorical parsley before finally
- serving up some solutions. "We must begin paying off the debt
- by the year 2000," reads the document promisingly, before descending
- into a laundry list of the obvious. "Combat waste, fraud and
- abuse...Streamline government." Churlishly, the declaration
- focuses on the programs of the elderly as a source of income
- for the young. "Social security is a generational scam...Raise the retirement age." Does this mean Grandpa should go
- back to work at 70?
- </p>
- <p> The dozens of young people who helped write the declaration
- passionately defend its contents. "We see this as an opening
- salvo," says Jonathan Karl, 25, a writer and editor at Freedom
- House, a human-rights group. "We want to put people on notice
- that we have a direction, and we want these to be the central
- topics of discussion and action by our generation." Bill Strauss,
- 46, co-author of the book 13th Gen: Abort, Retry, Ignore, Fail?
- and one of the few participants in the group over 40, compares
- the declaration with the anti-Establishment Port Huron Statement
- issued by Tom Hayden and Students for a Democratic Society in
- 1962. Says Strauss: "I am optimistic that when we look back
- at the history of the '90s and the youth movement, this will
- be an important document."
- </p>
- <p> Third Millennium is a case study of how to use the new-generation
- craze to grab the spotlight. The group notified more than 800
- journalists about the announcement of their manifesto, which
- Third Millennium members plan to take to college campuses across
- the U.S. They also intend to spread the word using computer
- bulletin boards. Several Third Millennium members are veterans
- of the sound-bite-savvy Lead or Leave, a year-old political
- group that has received funding from Ross Perot. Lead or Leave's
- specialties are deficit fighting and generational politics;
- founders Jon Cowan and Rob Nelson helped craft the Third Millennium
- statement.
- </p>
- <p> Whether the Third Millennium flies or fizzles, its target audience
- has huge potential as a political force. A 1993 survey by the
- National Opinion Research Center found that 4.8% of people ages
- 18 to 29 were members of a political organization, in contrast
- to 2.3% of those 30 to 39 and 2.5% of those 40 to 64. Curtis
- Gans, director of the Committee for the Study of the American
- Electorate, says the 18-to-24 age group went from 29% of the
- electorate in 1988 to nearly 37% in 1992, the largest increase
- for any demographic group. But William Schneider, political
- analyst at American Enterprise Institute, is dubious about youthful
- suffrage: "The basic truth of American politics has been that
- young people and poor people don't vote."
- </p>
- <p> Robin Templeton, 23, a Washington activist and editor of the
- progressive youth newspaper Education for the People, doubts
- whether such groups as Third Millennium and Lead or Leave represent
- a genuine spectrum of their generation. "There's a dichotomy
- in coverage of youth groups by the media," she says. "They cover
- groups made up of mostly white, affluent men in their 20s and
- talk about a new generation, and then they cover urban, black
- youth gangs the same age and say, `Look, they're not going anywhere.'
- " Templeton sees more cultural diversity in many grass-roots
- youth organizations, including the Student Environmental Action
- Coalition and the United States Student Association.
- </p>
- <p> Tabitha Soren, 26, who has trekked across the U.S. for the past
- 21 months reporting on youth politics for MTV, thinks the Third
- Millennium credo smacks too much of reductionist thinking. "They've
- simplified very complex problems," she says. "People who talk
- about streamlining government have to think about repercussions."
- She also questions whether the group has truly captured the
- "tone" of its generation. "I always try to be conscious of the
- fact that I'm a white female from a middle-class background.
- I'd be interested in how much they got out there and talked
- to people."
- </p>
- <p> MTV reached out to real people in a survey of 800 young adults
- 18 to 29, the details of which the network hasn't yet disclosed.
- In general, the poll found a generation that felt distinguished
- by its facility with high-tech devices, its open-mindedness
- and its diversity of cultures and life-styles. Young adults
- also tend to define themselves in the negative, believing their
- age group is characterized by violence and fiscal angst. "They
- are overwhelmingly negative in terms of seeing political institutions
- as part of the problem," says Gwen Lipsky, head of research
- for MTV. Yet there's a sense of can-do optimism: "When you ask
- them about their own options for the future, they feel that
- through hard work and getting along, they'll be able to get
- where they want to go."
- </p>
- <p> Third Millennium represents a kind of trickle-down political
- activism: build it, publicize it, and they will come. However,
- many people in their 20s feel distanced from such artificial,
- removed-from-life solutions. "I know everything in the White
- House connects to what I'm doing, but it seems so far away,"
- says John Jackson, a summa cum laude graduate of Howard University,
- who has been unable to find a summer job, even as a cashier.
- Others express a sense of generational siege. "The AARP [American
- Association of Retired Persons] has the power to mortgage our
- future," says Joe Ross Edelheit, 21, a former field coordinator
- for presidential candidate Paul Tsongas. "Our generation is
- under attack."
- </p>
- <p> Every generation likes to believe it is uniquely dysfunctional:
- the Lost, the Beat, the Me generations. It's the nature of youth
- to reject and rebel. "We have to hate our immediate predecessors
- to get free of their authority," D.H. Lawrence once said. Many
- people in their 20s believe baby boomers have treated the economy,
- the environment and even the institution of marriage the way
- a reckless driver treats a rental car. The Third Millennium
- may fail, but it's a signal that another generation--angered
- by the deficit and bitter over retirees who got theirs while
- the getting was good--is ready to take the wheel. Boomers
- may be in for a bumpy ride.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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