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Resisting MTV's spoon-fed politics
Daily Pennsylvanian (U. Pennsylvania) ^ | 4/7/04 | Justin Raphael

Posted on 04/08/2004 12:23:33 PM PDT by NorCoGOP

PHILADELPHIA -- Last week, Sen. John Kerry was interviewed on MTV's Choose or Lose, during which he was asked predictably useless questions, such as, "Are you cool?" and "What musical and cultural movements interest you?" It was, nevertheless, interesting that his answer to the former was as muddled as the Massachusetts senator's view on a host of other things.

And it was comically surreal to hear a Beacon Hill Yalie deem hip hop respectable poetry -- Kerry sailed with the Kennedys, who quoted Aeschylus, and he admires 50 Cent?

There is, however, no comedy in the way young people are treated in our political system. Goethe wrote, "The destiny of any nation, at any given time depends on the opinions of its young men under 25." Given that a great majority of American young people take for granted their citizenship in the world's greatest democracy, the future of this country seems foreboding, if not imperiled -- this from a generation that saw, in tears of liberation from Berlin to Cape Town to Moscow, the sanctity of its freedom.

But while we are ultimately responsible for our apathy, it seems narrow to say that those of us born in the '80s are just lazy. Perhaps after our Baby Boomer parents discovered that no amount of protest could make them the Greatest Generation, we in turn realized that the New Left politics of guilt are incompatible with our '90s maxim: "If it feels good, do it." And of course, there are a great number of those, many of them young, who feel that we just need to be energized by Rock the Vote, that political apathy can be cured with an injection of pop enthusiasm.

Never mind that the people on MTV are much better looking than those on C-SPAN. At its root, much of this analysis rests on an inverted principle: Some think that kids will only vote if they're treated like kids. In fact, that is precisely why we don't vote. The notion of a "youth" politics is the most degrading and dangerous form of identity politics in America today, most simply because, like so many of our social institutions, it does not give kids any credit.

The enveloping of political exhortation in a cloak of popular culture is the height of paternalism. The idea that the world of my generation can be boiled down into the utter simplicity of a Britney obsession is absurd. Were the 1960s only about the Beatles? Presenting politics as something as simple as a rock concert creates a cognitive dissonance that can result only in apathy.

I have no illusions that our generation is tougher than that which died to save the world, but consider that we live in a world where one can watch 3,000 people die on national television, a place in which every sexual encounter is a life or death situation. We know that there are things that are terrifying and that matter, and we have opinions about them. Hence bubblegum voter activism assumes an innocence of which we are innocent.

What is more, to presume generational unity is naive if not disingenuous. It is more than the fact that we don't all like the same music. Why should the most diverse generation in American history be presumed to be the same merely because we are the same age? This is a veil of homogeneity of the kind that spawned the Yippies, and those who would pull it over our eyes ultimately court nothing but the same kind of generational conflict.

For in their patronizing neutrality, rock politics imply that we are simply too young for serious critique. While most of us read the Socratic maxim that the unexamined life is not worth living, we are told to vote simply for the sake of doing so. If we were merely interested in voter turnout, we could require it, but we don't because a free society depends upon the recognition that freedom is valuable and depends upon our responsibility.

This, incidentally, casts doubt on why, for the sake of democracy, we should exhort people to vote who don't see it as important in the first place. But we should nevertheless be critical of those who treat us as if being critical was something only for adults. After all, we are constantly told from Convocation onward that, in the words of Mario Savio, "the university is the place where people begin seriously to question the conditions of their existence and raise the issue of whether they can be committed to the society they have been born into."

The infantilizing of "youth" politics is most ridiculous when coupled with the fact that we live in a categorical society, one in which our race, religion, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, even our inclination toward meat -- in short, being ourselves -- are political statements. This world of identity politics, particularly those of "youth," simultaneously defines maturation as a comfort with who we are, and in so doing, makes adolescence itself a political act. No wonder, then, that my generation does not vote; for most of us, growing up is hard enough already.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004election; 2004electionbias; 501c3abuse; 501c3violations; boycott; boycottviacom; campaignfinance; ccrm; cfr; charities; electionlaws; irs; mediabias; mtv; taxcheat; taxlaws; viacom; viacommies; votesmart; youthvote
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1 posted on 04/08/2004 12:23:33 PM PDT by NorCoGOP
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To: NorCoGOP
during which he was asked predictably useless questions

"Sen. Kerry...if you were a color, which one would you be"?

2 posted on 04/08/2004 12:28:36 PM PDT by Puppage (You may disagree with what I have to say, but I shall defend to your death my right to say it.)
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To: NorCoGOP
When asked if he wears boxers or briefs, Kerry (not wanting to offend) indicated, "both."
3 posted on 04/08/2004 12:28:53 PM PDT by anniegetyourgun
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4 posted on 04/08/2004 12:29:55 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Don't be a nuancy boy)
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To: NorCoGOP
Anyone who gets their political info from MTV isnt going to vote anyway.
5 posted on 04/08/2004 12:30:04 PM PDT by Husker24
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To: NorCoGOP
THERE IS A CONCERTED EFFORT AT WORK HERE. (And it's against Pres. Bush IMO)

http://www.rockthevote.org/

http://www.smackdownyourvote.com/

http://www.hiphopsummitactionnetwork.org
6 posted on 04/08/2004 12:33:40 PM PDT by OXENinFLA
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To: Husker24
We can only hope...
7 posted on 04/08/2004 12:34:50 PM PDT by WinOne4TheGipper (By it's very definition, atheism does not need evangelism.)
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To: Husker24
You could not be more wrong.

The MVT'ist are being taught to hate all things republican.


(See my prior post)
8 posted on 04/08/2004 12:35:06 PM PDT by OXENinFLA
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To: NorCoGOP
I can hear the questions now, "Mr Kerry", "What are you going to do about the rights of biracial, transexual, mentally challenged, quadropalegic, differently abled, opressed people"? Kerry: "I support free tuition, and affirmative action" "Mr Kerry", "What are your views on abortion"? Kerry: "Not only am I a supporter of Abortion, I would introduce legislation supporting extending the right to choose untill the fetus is 5 years of age."
9 posted on 04/08/2004 12:40:23 PM PDT by Husker24
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To: Puppage
"Sen. Kerry...if you were a color, which one would you be"?

"I would like to be blue, but I'd pick red."

10 posted on 04/08/2004 12:40:40 PM PDT by trebb (Ain't God good . . .)
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To: trebb
but I'd pick red

WE HAVE A WINNER!!

11 posted on 04/08/2004 12:42:19 PM PDT by Puppage (You may disagree with what I have to say, but I shall defend to your death my right to say it.)
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To: NorCoGOP
This whole MTV get out the vote crap is just a way for libs to indoctrinate kids into socialism and make them vote for the demoncrats.
12 posted on 04/08/2004 12:43:02 PM PDT by chronotrigger (good pick up line- "my, that's the whitest white part of the eye I've ever seen, do you floss?")
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To: NorCoGOP
From 'VOTE SMART'

http://www.mtv.com/chooseorlose/partners/votesmart/

http://www.vote-smart.org/election_president_fun_facts.php?can_id=CNIP9043&PHPSESSID=8ab51dbbe3335f26726a7b27d666ed0f

Books about the Candidate:
'It's Still the Economy Stupid: George W. Bush, the GOP's CEO', by Paul Begala
'George and Laura: 'Portrait of an American Marriage', by Christopher Andersen
'Shrub:The Short but Happy Political Life of George W. Bush', by Ivins and Dubose
'Fortunate Son: George W. Bush and the Making of An American President', by Hatfield and Miller
'Bush at War,' by Bob Woodward
'Bush's Brain: How Karl Rove Made George W. Bush Presidential', by James C. Moore and Wayne Slater
'Boy Genius: Karl Rove, the Brains Behind the Remarkable Political Triumph of George W. Bush', by Lou Dubose, Jan Reid, Carl M. Cannon
'The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush', by David Frum
'Made in Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics', by Michael Lind
'The Leadership Genius of George W. Bush: 10 Common Sense Lessons from the Commander-in-Chief', by Carolyn B. Thompson and James W. Ware.
13 posted on 04/08/2004 12:43:14 PM PDT by OXENinFLA
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To: trebb
"Sen. Kerry...if you were a color, which one would you be"?

Im running to be second Black president, next question......bitch.
14 posted on 04/08/2004 12:43:55 PM PDT by Husker24
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To: NorCoGOP
Interesting.
15 posted on 04/08/2004 12:49:18 PM PDT by lilylangtree (Veni, Vidi, Vici)
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To: NorCoGOP
we in turn realized that the New Left politics of guilt are incompatible with our '90s maxim: "If it feels good, do it."

Um, I think that "maxim" has been attributed, at some point, to the past 4 decades running. The 90's I experienced (my twenties) hardly embraced indulgence from single, drinking, smoking, heterosexual bon vivants. It was one of the most sterile decades in history, Clinton notwithstanding.

Notice the author here talks about every sexual encounter being "life and death". Give me a break. It's life and death if you're bumping bellies with a hooker, heroin addict, or some other miscreant that in the pre-AIDS era would be carrying some other pathogen. It's also life and death if you're playing for the other team, of course, but we can't point out that glaring demographic anomaly for fear of being "intolerant".

In my experience, it's been those younger than me who are less inclined to tolerate those who don't toe the Leftist line.

16 posted on 04/08/2004 1:22:16 PM PDT by Mr. Bird (Ain't the beer cold!)
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To: NorCoGOP
Kerry sailed with the Kennedys

The myth, John Ketchup-boy-gigolo Kerry sailed with JFK in the days of Camelot (much like the footage of Bill Clinton shaking hands/passing the torch with JFK).

The reality is he spent his days with Ted Kennedy. Let's see what THAT looks like:

This was the only image I was able to google...)

17 posted on 04/08/2004 2:26:55 PM PDT by weegee (Maybe Urban Outfitters should sell t-shirts that say "Voting Democrat is for Old Dead People.")
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To: OXENinFLA; mhking; Timesink; *CCRM; governsleastgovernsbest; martin_fierro; reformed_democrat; ...
Your post shows another 501c3 TAX CHEAT masking their partisan political activism.

I say that this deserves a "Just Damn" Media Schenanigans DOUBLE PING

18 posted on 04/08/2004 2:32:39 PM PDT by weegee (Maybe Urban Outfitters should sell t-shirts that say "Voting Democrat is for Old Dead People.")
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To: anniegetyourgun
When asked if he wears boxers or briefs, Kerry (not wanting to offend) indicated, "both."

Kerry, do you wear frilly French underwear or a thong?

19 posted on 04/08/2004 2:35:50 PM PDT by weegee (Maybe Urban Outfitters should sell t-shirts that say "Voting Democrat is for Old Dead People.")
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To: OXENinFLA
What's more, these organizations purport to be "non-partisan" (for tax purposes). DEFUND THE LEFT and haul the tax cheats into court.
20 posted on 04/08/2004 2:37:00 PM PDT by weegee (Maybe Urban Outfitters should sell t-shirts that say "Voting Democrat is for Old Dead People.")
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