Posted on 04/12/2010 6:21:14 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
What happens when the Millennial Generation members of which are between the ages of 18 and 29 sees its high expectations for change dashed? The new health-reform law may let us find out.
The Millennials received a jolt last week, and it wasnt from their morning cups of mocha latté. It came from an Associated Press headline, Health Premiums Could Rise 17 Pct for Young Adults. The story began:
Under the health care overhaul, young adults who buy their own insurance will carry a heavier burden of the medical costs of older Americans a shift expected to raise insurance premiums for young people when the plan takes full effect.
Beginning in 2014, most Americans will be required to buy insurance or pay a tax penalty. Thats when premiums for young adults seeking coverage on the individual market would likely climb by 17 percent on average, or roughly $42 a month, according to an analysis of the plan conducted for The Associated Press.
Why? The new law caps how much insurance companies can charge older, less healthy individuals, the most expensive group to insure. Specifically, the premium for an unhealthy 55-year-old can be no more than three times the premium charged to even the healthiest 20-year-old. In a free insurance market, that ratio would be more like seven-to-one. To recoup their losses on older clients, insurers will have to overcharge their younger policyholders by 17 percent, according to the AP-commissioned study and by as much as 50 percent according to other credible studies.
The higher costs, the AP noted, will pinch many people in their 20s and early 30s who are struggling to start or advance their careers with the highest unemployment rate in 26 years.
The only solace the new law has to offer these twentysomethings is dependency. One provision allows Millennials to stay on their parents health-insurance plans to age 26. Another would let low-income single adults become dependent on Medicaid, a poorly performing welfare program that rations care.
If thats not enough to ruin the morning for Millennials, theres also Sen. Lamar Alexanders (R., Tenn.) critique of the new government takeover of the student-loan industry:
As Americans find out what it really does, theyll be really unhappy. . . . The first really unhappy people will be the 19 million students who, after July 1, will have no choice but to go to federal call centers to get their student loans. Theyll become even unhappier when they find out that the government is charging 2.8 percent to borrow the money and 6.8 percent to lend it to the students, and spending the difference on the new health-care bill and other programs. In other words, the government will be overcharging 19 million students.
The overcharge is significant, Alexander noted, running between $1,700 and $1,800 on the average $25,000 student loan.
So, not only will the new insurance rules shift the cost of health care from the most pampered generation in human history to the most fiscally burdened one, but todays college kids will pay more for their student loans.
Will our Millennial friends rebel over this, not to mention the other costs that will weigh down their balance sheets? After all, paying a few hundred dollars more each year for health coverage or student loans, while no small burden, pales in comparison to what theyll have to cough up to cover Medicare, Social Security, and nursing-home stays for the Boomers.
Millennial Generation voters surely rank among President Obamas most loyal supporters. Exit polls indicate that they swooned for The One by a more than two-to-one margin (66 percent to 32 percent) on Election Day 2008. Indeed, the alliance between Obama and Millennials may be a match made in heaven. The Pew Research Centers ideological profile of Millennials, for example, places them decidedly to the left of older Americans on social issues and finds they are more forgiving of governmental activism and less supportive of an assertive national-security policy than are older voters.
Millenials remain largely in Obamas corner to this day, but their fervor is waning. Pew found that, over the course of 2009, Millennials grew increasingly disenchanted with both the president and his party. The presidents approval rating among young voters fell from its post-inaugural high of 73 percent to 57 percent in February. The Democrats partisan advantage among Millennials narrowed as well, moving from 60 percent31 percent to 54 percent40 percent over the last year. Their positive assessment of Obamas handling of health care and the economy over the last year tumbled even more dramatically, by 17 and 22 percentage points respectively.
And the first Gallup survey conducted after the new health-care law took effect found respectable, but less than overwhelming, support for Obamas signature legislative achievement among those between 18 and 34 years old. Little more than half (54 percent) viewed the new law as a good thing. A significant minority (45 percent) dissented.
So, will younger voters come to resent all these new burdens Obama and his allies are placing on their shoulders? And, if so, will they make their views known in Novembers elections?
Answers to those questions may be found in polls conducted by Scott Rasmussen. Unlike other pollsters, Rasmussen surveys likely voters rather than adults or registered voters. The methodology offers the best possible insight into the attitudes of those who will actually cast their ballots on Election Day.
Rasmussens poll results suggest that the Millennials who plan to vote in November are a breed apart from the broader sample surveyed by Pew. In fact, they seem to possess the sort of ideological instincts that will facilitate a rightward shift in their political behavior. A close reading suggests that if the Millennium Generation is to move to the right, it will be because they have come to appreciate the unique intergenerational fiscal burden being foisted on them.
A couple of examples: Among Millennials who say they are very likely to vote, two-thirds believe spending and tax increases hurt the economy. Even higher proportions look kindly on tax and spending cuts, saying they will foster economic growth. Little wonder that, by a resounding 78 percent17 percent margin, they prefer a government that provides fewer services and taxes us less to one that taxes us more and provides more services. Ask them to assess the merits of offshore drilling for oil and natural gas, and they turn out to be even more supportive than Americans in general. And so on.
The kids, it seems, are all right. But, to evaluate health reform and other big-government power grabs properly, they will need to connect the negative consequences (higher prices, constrained wages, fewer job opportunities, etc.) to the policies that gave rise to them. Then those healthy, and generally conservative, policy instincts can kick in.
Michael G. Franc is vice president of government relations for the Heritage Foundation.
My question is: Are they smart enough to recognize this?
That's easy. They were promised lots of "free stuff". How do we match that?
They liked that Obamao was not Bush and his evil Halliburton-connected administration, and was going to fix all the horrible things that the mean-spirited Republicans had done to the country after their first love, Bildo Klintoon, left office.
ummm...the extent of news exposure for the 18-29 crowd is the “Daily Show” on Comedy Central. They have no clue what is going on...
And personally I have no idea why my generation voted for this guy. My guess is that they're uninformed on the issues, or it was the "cool" thing to do. The Lemming effect also comes to mind...
Lol!@them!
They damn sure better rock something, or they are gonna be rocked by taxes so high.
I’ll be dead by then, so guess what...
I don’t think they will rebel. I think they will stay home in droves. That’s how they “rebel.” Obama (unfortunately) got his one shot with them.
The Millennials are, in large measure, Obama’s chumps. They supported him in large numbers and yet, ultimately, they are the ones who are going to get stuck with the bill. I have begun to think of them as the Chump Generation.
I dunno, what I saw at work was that he was "One of the Cool Kids".
People were worried about "What did he do?" "What did he say?" "What were his NCAA Basketball Brackets?"
Not "What were his policies?"
Style over substance.
I think we can change the way the youth look at things in the education system. Start telling them the truth as to how things really work in our country. Nothing is free, you have to be careful who you put in office, don’t fall for all the promises when the general public knows better. The youth, if they really want to get involved, need to listen to the experienced around them. The main thing for the youth to understand is that the bigger the government, the more control they have over their lives and the lives of the people around them.
As someone who is also of this particular generation, I think you’ve basically got it right. There were largely two reasons for it. One was simply the Lemming Effect that you mentioned. Most are nothing more than overgrown teenagers who will blindly trample over each other to jump onto the latest fad.
Second, the media assured them that it was cool to vote for him. He wasn’t an old white guy, and he was gonna bring hope and change. Different=cool. Now, whatever the hell hope and change actually were...well, not many of them actually cared. Wrap it all up in pseudo-intellectual socialist bullsh*t similar to what they’re force fed in school, and the ones that actually are paying attention are ignorant enough to jump onto the bandwagon, too.
My guess is that a good portion of them will stay home in 2012 now that the reality of both the world and the Obama administration are setting in.
Obama was younger than the fella the Republicans ran.
Just finished reading “Obamazombies” and highly recommend it to all. Really nails how and why younger voters went for Obama.
So, will younger voters come to resent all these new burdens Obama and his allies are placing on their shoulders? NO when you dumb down and brain wash socialism sounds like a good deal.that’s why eveyone wants to hire a teen while they still know everything.
The youth have found out that they are not only not getting the “Skittle Crapping Unicorns” that they were promised,
but that Skittles don’t come in “chocolate”.
I spent the majority of my time in high school (and college when I could stomach it) arguing with "teachers" about the propaganda they're were shoving down our faces rather than actually learning.
However, the Obama election win was a good one in that, being unashamedly and unabashedly presented as The Answer To All That Ails Evil America, the young people who were on the receiving end of this “education” will (sooner rather than later) realize they were sold a bill of goods in terms of their “education”, thanks to the strong dose of “stern reality” the Obama presidency is giving us.
America knows no other history, no other past, and in spite of the best efforts of the heirs and disciples of Saul Alinsky and Antonio Gramsci, Americans, by birth, intuitively know their birthright.
The Left is putting everything into this man, this presidency, and if they do not succeed, they will have blown the wad and will likely be relegated to unimportant fringe status, politically speaking, for at least the next 50 years.
How? Their collapse will be followed by an equally seismic event in the educational establishment, due to the fact that so many people now are aware of what is going on, and why it has happened.
However, they will not give up power quietly, easily or lightly. Such change is accompanied by lots and lots of turmoil, so we should prepare for the long haul.
But it's worth it, is it not?
CA....
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