Age

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WU Political Review

Inside the Mind of a Young, Angry Leftist Benjamin de Jonge Artwork (right) by Shonali Palacios

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he status quo has shifted dramatically over the past four or five decades to one where inequality is rampant but ignored. Illegal wars are declared and immeasurable lives are lost but are dismissed for the sake of ‘national security.’ The destruction of our planet remains on most governments’ peripheries despite fires encroaching on backyards. Undoubtedly, if we were to step out of our ivory towers, we would see that the world is in shambles. Given this, to me and many others, the older generation’s dismissive attitude towards our cries for a remedy is infuriating. Increasingly, young activists have either had the awareness to look beyond their privilege and recognize the problems plaguing the world or been directly harmed by them. For instance, Greta Thunberg champions the international movement against climate change. Malala Yousafzai defies the Taliban through her advocacy for female education. Many of the Parkland survivors challenged the National Rifle Association when numerous adults wouldn’t. Young people have picked the torch up off the ground where our preceding generations left it smoldering. They haven’t done so because they like the attention or the power that being a prominent figure has given them. They have done so because they must. It is in no way the youth’s responsibility to lead the world, yet in many instances that duty falls on us due to the failure of the ruling class. Our leaders have shown a sincere lack of leadership, courage, and commitment to ideas, unlike many of these young reformers. Thunberg’s recent speech at the United Nations epitomized this frustration when she lambasted the world’s ruling class and declared that “You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words… People are suffering. People are dying… How dare you.” Greta’s tone is full of fury, and it’s justified. The state of the world compared to its rate of change is far too underwhelming to take the backseat and trust the status quo.

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Greta’s anger is paralleled in the American left, many of whose members are similarly as young. Just as Thunberg’s anger is dismissed as radical posturing from a child that doesn’t know better, Bernie Sanders supporters are characterized as ‘toxic,’ ‘nasty,’ and ‘naïve’ in order to discredit their message. In truth, many of the most outspoken supporters of Sanders are toxic and nasty to political opponents, but are far from naïve. Given the level of oppression and neglect felt by much of the working class, as well as the older generation’s general apathy towards such oppression and neglect, this attitude is more than understandable. Interestingly, this group of infuriated leftists feels a lot, and perhaps a majority, of its outwards animosity towards members of their own political party. This hasn’t always been the case though. Since the disenfranchisement of Southern Democrats in the election of 1960, there were decades of relative unity among the Democrats. More recently, Obama offered someone to rally around to combat the destructive legacy of the Bush administration. However, Obama fell flat on his progressive promise, which enabled a certain Vermont Senator to build a movement demanding more substantial change. The claustrophobic nature of our two-party system opened the door for this disagreement among partisans. The Democratic party is growing a class-conscious tumor that threatens to destroy its modern conception. This party is characterized no longer as a platform but instead as an amalgam of non-Trumpian politicians. The result of this has been an especially tumultuous primary season. The presidential primary’s obviously combative nature can be extended to a lot of the more invisible congressional and local elections. Bernie’s relative success in 2016 and the elections of young progressives such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida Tlaib, and Ilhan Omar in 2018 have motivated many to challenge the Democratic Party establishment. Even Nancy Pelosi’s seat is being challenged this

election cycle by Shahid Buttar, who has been no stranger to calling out Pelosi’s conservative positions. This revolt from the Democratic Left isn’t just some power grab either. These leftist candidates are tired of being unrewarded for their support of the supposed left wing of the United States. The Democratic establishment’s inaction over the decades has posited young people to rage and rebellion. Akin to activists such as Thunberg and Yousafzai, young people aren’t becoming active or prominent for personal advancement, but instead because of an inability of the center left to challenge the strong and mobilized right. It should be no surprise, then, that almost all of these far-left challengers constitute a young and diverse group. By virtue of their youth, they feel no allegiance to the Clintons, Bidens, and Pelosis of the world. Many politicians’ prestige comes from before we were even born, and thus warrants little respect. Just as the old dismiss the young as inexperienced, the young dismiss the old for their experience. This anger is compounded when moderate Democrats pretend that they do represent the left’s interests. For young people to be so engaged and involved only to have people like Joe Biden pretend that he has “the most progressive record” among the presidential hopefuls overestimates our gullibility. Elites such as Biden notice the wind changing and are attempting to capitalize on its growing popularity. Democrats opposed gay marriage while it was unpopular only to co-opt the movement as it became more favorable to seem more progressive. Our elected officials should be enacting change, not responding to it. It appears most people running for president are far detached from the problems many endure, such as inadequate health care, gross inequality, and a broken criminal justice system. And the consequences of not acknowledging this detachment are severe. For one, the United States has been at war for nearly my entire life.


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