Posted on 02/18/2006 6:34:06 PM PST by DogByte6RER
2006: Turning point for young conservatives
Posted: January 5, 2006
By Hans Zeiger
Something big is going on in America, but few are yet aware of it. It is a generational shift comparable to that of the infamous '60s, and it will involve as much revolt and upheaval. In this case, revolution is desperately needed, for the previous revolution has almost destroyed the country. The new revolution will repair the country.
Yet 2006 will not be the beginning of the revolution it has already been gathering steam now for several years. But it will, I predict, commence the vigorous public discussion of that revolution, much as it became clear sometime early or middle of the 1960s that a revolution was then taking place.
The main characters in the unfolding story are the Reagan Babies.
Reagan Babies are at the forefront of the rising generation. Those of us born between 1981 and 1989, the Reagan years, are on the cutting edge of what has variously been called the Millennial Generation or Generation Next or Generation Y. Reagan Babies are fascinating at the present moment because they are the emerging future leaders of America, now in high school and college and just joining the workforce and on the military frontlines of Iraq and Afghanistan. But beyond the present, the intellectual and political and cultural vanguard of our generation will hail from among the Reagan Babies. And it is decisively, revolutionarily, conservative.
Spiritually, Reagan Babies are interested in God and a return to more traditional patterns of faith. According to a UCLA study released in October, three out of four college students claim to be "searching for some meaning/purpose in life," and two thirds say they derive guidance and direction from their faith, and two thirds pray. There hasn't been a generation-wide Christian revival, but I am convinced that God is preparing our generation for such a revival.
"I think the generation today is open, they're searching and they're looking. They know there's more to life than just what you see," said Meredith Peterson, a volunteer for the 2006 Passion Conference which is expected to draw 18,000 students and young people to Nashville this week for prayer and worship. Young Christians are moving into the most influential places in our culture, and they are uniting together in the battle for hearts and minds. Evangelical Christian colleges have the fastest growing student bodies in higher education. Homeschoolers, most of them Christians, are ambitious and well-prepared for the world.
Morally, Reagan Babies are cautious and responsible. Teen pregnancy is down; teen abortion is down; teen drug use is down; youth volunteerism is up; manners and mores are coming back into fashion. Once, we were the most aborted generation, and now we are the most pro-life generation of Americans. Three in five young Americans support a complete ban or partial restrictions on abortion, according to a 2004 Zogby poll.
On campus, where the hippie Left has long thought their battle to be won, the growing conservatism of young Americans translates into activism. Conservatives are no longer silent in the classroom, popular Affirmative Action bake sales and conservative campus newspapers have confounded professors, and a well-funded network of "subversive" foundations and support networks is in place, ranging from Young Americas Foundation to the Intercollegiate Studies Institute to the Leadership Institute, and from College Republicans to pro-life and Christian student groups. Brendan Steinhauser, author of "The Conservative Revolution: How to Win the Battle on College Campuses," calls the surge of activism "the new counter-culture on America's campuses."
In November, Christopher Flickinger, a recent graduate of the Ohio University Scripps School of Journalism, launched the Network of College Conservatives. Flickinger's mission is "to educate, inform, expose and counter the liberal bias on college campuses throughout America." So far, students at around 220 colleges have signed up to be part of the Network. As Flickinger told FoxNews.com, "Hopefully, we'll bring this quiet revolution to a loud, boisterous battle."
So, 2006 is looking to be the year when the quiet revolution becomes loud.
Hans Zeiger is an Eagle Scout, president and founder of the Scout Honor Coalition and a student at Hillsdale College in Michigan. His new book, "Get Off My Honor: The Assault on the Boy Scouts of America," can be purchased from ShopNetDaily.
That was a great Red Dawn reference.
WOOT! Yay for me and the rest of the Gen-Y'ers. Of course, according to this, I'm still a Gen Xer (1980 baby here).
I'm EXCITED for the whirlwind to sweep across this country, and may God Bless us and everyone who sees the need for change.
I think the "official" definition of Gen-X is anyone born between 1964 - 1981. Which means that both Christina Aguilera (born 1980) and Steve Carell (born 1964) are Gen-Xers.
I was born when Carter had just taken office, but Reagan's the first President I remember. I liked him even when I was too young to know a thing about politics!
They are so funny. :-)This is the next craze.
WOLVERINES!!
Man, I haven't thought about that movie in a decade. Scared the crap out of me when I was a teenager.
Actually, perhaps Mass will eventually become the conservative "Mecca" for the US. You know, the more something goes one way, the more it will swing back to the other way. Its the Sinusoidal law of history.
The University of Washingtom students who dissed Papy Boyington evidently didn't get the memo.
Future wife? Good luck, buddy. I suggest you look into one of those mail-order brides.
The subject is "2006: Turning point for young conservatives".
What on earth are you talking about?
I was originally dem in HS, mostly because I live in UT and, according to my peers, was one of those evil, mean, calculating Nevadans in HS (some claimed they met people like me when they went to Clark County to gamble) but I slowly started to change when I went to USU in northern UT the professors, even up there, were horribly liberal and mean, I had acquaintances fail their exams because they talked favorably about Bush. I saw the last affirmative action bake sale at USU (theyve pretty much banned them) and learned what Aff. Act. was. We students find new ways to ensure that we avoid classes taught by whackjobsword of mouth, websites, blogs, etc.something Gen X never was able to do because the internet wasnt as big back then. I consider myself a moderateI dont like dems because they are pretty much commies, and I dont like Reps (GOP) because they are backward and weird. Several people my age have said, at least around here, that if there was a conservative/moderate candidate who wasnt annoyingly religious or trying to create a commie society, then wed vote for them. The whole religion thing has not happened yet. There isnt anything for evangelicals for me at church after 18, to be honest. At least one study on Millennials from Zondervan found that 40% of churched Millennials abandon church after HS. I dont know where they get this especially religious thing fromor the fact that Im supposed to like traditional, cold churches run by people shamed of sex, who feel I shouldve married at 20. (http://www.boundless.org/2005/articles/a0001135.cfm) (Boundless is run by Focus on the Family). Yeah, were more conservative, but were not religious. Even the Mormons are more honest in admitting they dont retain their people after high school. I really wish evangelicals would quit assuming that sometime or later society is going to go back the 1950s and everyone will accept the traditional church. It aint going to happen. Sorry guys! Oh, I am a Reagan baby. Born in 83 graduated HS in 2001. Did not like Clinton at all. During his second presidency I really hated him. Cannot fathom why people speak ill of Reagan but lavish praise at Clinton. The latter was an idiot.
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