College age voters in 2008 had no doubt who and what they were voting for as they yelled 'Obamanos!' on way to polls
It was Thomas Jefferson who
first pointed out the supreme importance of the citizen's knowledge background in his Notes
on Virginia, i.e.
"Every government degenerates when trusted to the rulers of
the people alone. The people themselves therefore are its only safe
depositories. AND TO RENDER THEM SAFE, THEIR MINDS MUST BE IMPROVED"
Why the difficulty? Jefferson knew, as any intelligent American would, that being a "safe depository" of democracy in one's nation meant being attentive to its politics, history and political dynamics. That includes an easy recognition of the most important, critical issues at a given time, the most rational choices in each case, and not being distracted by the inevitable 'push' and 'pull' or divisions, even squabbling, that occurs in a nation that exalts free speech.
That came to the fore recently when I read two different articles, one in the LA Times (by Nicholas Goldberg) and the other in NY Times, about youthful American voters and their current lapses, political tendencies and especially knowledge of U.S. history.
In the latter case, we were informed by Nicholas Goldberg in his op-ed on Oct. 12 about the appalling holes in American history knowledge:
"Most Americans don’t know which countries the United States fought
against in World War II or when the U.S. Constitution was ratified.
Good luck having them point
to Ukraine on a map, much less Belarus. Watch them stare blankly if you ask
who represents them in the state legislature or what
rights are protected by the 1st Amendment.
There is nothing particularly new about this. As far back as April
4, 1943, the New York Times reported on its
front page that college freshmen around the country showed “a striking
ignorance of even the most elementary aspects of United States history.” Among
other things, the paper reported that only 6% could name the 13 original
states."
This is nothing short of horrific given our history has now been 'weaponized' by the likes of Trump as well as Florida Gov. Ron Desantis. In the case of Trump, as Goldberg notes, as president "he created a 1776 commission to do battle with the radicals and socialists he insists dominate our schools. Our children, he said, are being fed a “twisted web of lies” about the United States in which the men and women who built it were not heroes, but rather villains.” In fact, it was Trump's bogus commission that engendered the twisted lies and as Goldberg confirms, resulted in propaganda. Desantis is no better, and his miseducation mandates have already banned or circumscribed the teaching of aspects of the Civil War, and effects of 'Jim Crow' racial segregation laws in 1950s-60s. In his latest punch back, he has limited teaching of aspects of the Holocaust, which - while not American history - did affect millions of American Jews.
The other article emphasized the 'meh' attitude of many younger voters in the run up to next year's momentous general election. A dreadful, recurring thread was that a sizeable proportion expressed a willingness to "sit it out". One Gen Z kid professed a "dislike for either of these old cheugy guys". And prefers younger blood. In other words, because this kid can't get his way with the choices offered, would be willing to effectively cast a vote for the criminal gangster and sexual predator Trump by his not -voting. Which is also a choice.
Others expressed horror at Biden's Willow drilling decision in AK, as a reason to not vote. Yet other black voters- male and female- expressed disappointment Biden "hasn't done enough to win their vote" whether to do with the debt ceiling or race issues or inflation or whatever. Yet other youngsters were disgusted at the constant political back and forth ('us vs. them'), endless bickering, to the extent they just want to "tune out" and stay home.
None of these naive would-be voters grasps that their non-choices could lead to their lives being devastated a hundred times worse than they think, if Trump gets in again. Truthfully, the weaponization of our history has impacted lots of these young voters, but that could be corrected if they read U.S. history - especially recent history at least from the Civil Rights era of the late 1950s. Do that instead of gravitating to social media and the politicos' "cringeworthy" stunts. Drop the damn cell phones, then,, and either read an actual newspaper from the local newsstand or access a paper online, e.g.
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