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Geoffrey G's avatar

I was a student at Georgetown University in the late 2000s. And I attended college with campus population overwhelming composed of... normies. If anything, I was a little disappointed at the aggressive conventionality of my fellow Hoyas. We all dressed the same, talked the same, and thought the same things were "awesome." I found it a little stultifying, to be honest. "Where is all this lively diversity of views I keep hearing about?" I wondered, a little disappointed at the lack of unhinged Leftists, far-right edge-lords, Anarcho-Syndicalists, and other colorfully outspoken people briefly interrupting our inevitable march towards an exciting career in investment banking, management consulting, or some such thing. That's not to say that there weren't a few oddballs on the Hilltop: At least one I knew became one of Trump's leading election-denying lawyer henchmen (so, rather the opposite of the Leftist Campus Stereotype). But, in general, we were a pretty inter-changable group of smart "future leaders" who wouldn't rattle the cage much.

Ever since then, I have just been increasingly flabbergasted by this depiction of The Youth--first, we Millennials, and now the Gen Z kids--as far more radical (and, frankly, less boring) a group than we actually are. I guess having Twitter Brain encourages this narrative and it certainly *gets the people going* out there because audiences never tire of reading and hearing about it. But, I mean, look around you: do almost half of the US population who are Millennial or Gen Z the descriptor that commentators are constantly assigning to them in these strawman Opinion pieces? Is everyone under 40 at your job this way? Are your own kids or grandkids?

No, right? Most people you know are about as exciting as you, yourself, are. Which means (no offense) probably not very exciting! They have zero opinions on any of the things that the Obsessively Online Conservatives are hate-reading all day. They have never been to a protest, much less organized a chapter of Antifa or Extinction Rebellion. They have never "cancelled" anybody. They don't like some opinions and prefer others, like any one else, but don't center their existence around these preferences. If pressed, they may have slightly more progressive views on certain social issues than people 30-60 years older. But, also, a lot of them don't! People younger than middle age are just... normal. Like you and me and most everyone else.

I know this is incredibly disappointing for both the actually-extremely-small group of true-believer Leftists and their increadibly-much-larger group of critics. But this is the mundane reality. And it was true even during more radical periods than our own. My dad made a journalism career of covering the Baby Boomer Counter-Culture. And, at the time, it was abundantly clear that for every anti-war youth or alternative lifestyle purveyor, there was an equal-and-opposite "Real American" with close-cropped hair and unyielding adherence to tradition. Many people today wonder how the Hippies could have all settled down and become Reaganite suburban Conservatives. The answer is that they didn't. They weren't the same people. Most Baby Boomers weren't Hippies and viewed the odd phenomenon from the same bemused remove that we do, in retrospect, a fact that eludes our received wisdom about the 1960s. The majority of Baby Boomers were, in fact, exactly as conventional as the aforementioned Millennials and Gen Z kids today. My mom, for example, was a Baby Boomer coming from the kind of educated, upper-middle-class, Northeastern, Republican-voting family that doesn't so much exist anymore. She, like most of the other nice girls in their town, supported Barry Goldwater in 1964. She eventually became a professor, but not one of these "Anti-American" ones, and is pretty solidly Centrist on most every political issue, despite, at one point, diverging from her parents sometime along the way and reliably voting for Democrats. But she never equalled the outspoken, working-class radicalism of my Silent Generation-born dad. He was an outlier among his generation and people like him are outliers today. I honestly wish half of the fever dreams of Conservatives were true and that Left-leaning troublemakers like my dad were anywhere near as prevalent as The Discourse seems to believe, because at least then our politics wouldn't be so stagnant! Instead, the vanguard of educated youth is much more like the Hoya Bros I went to school with: mostly not out to change a damn thing, except for their future earning potential.

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T R's avatar

Thanks for this. I have had an uneasy “can this be true?” spidey-sense about the “what’s going on on college campuses” narrative. It smacks of the “antifa” drumbeat we experienced in 2020.

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