Politics Information

Revitalizing The Power of the Baby Boomers


As baby boomers, we have been spoiled all of our lives. When we were teenagers, the world took note because there were so many of us. Our music, our beliefs, our fashions, our styles dominated the culture of the age. When we took to the streets to protest the war in Vietnam and to support the Civil Rights Movement, we found a ready audience. Television came into its own and we splattered ourselves and our causes across the living rooms of America.

For some of us, that was the best of times. We were young, idealistic, and naïve. We truly believed that we were making a difference. We were creating a future of hope, justice, fairness, and peace.

As we move towards retirement age, we look around us with diminished hope, broken promises, reddened eyes, and cynicism. Where is the new world order we so desperately sought? In the violence-filled streets of Baghdad? In the ruins of the World Trade Center? In the hills of Afghanistan? In the political condemnation of gay rights, resistance to a woman's right to control her own body, the death of Affirmative Action?

We look back in longing to the days before political assassinations turned the world upside down. Life was, indeed, so much simpler then. Involvement in revolution is for the young and naïve who, no matter the century, no matter the nation, no matter the cause, see only the possibilities and none of the difficulties that maintenance of profound social change demands.

Can we keep our ideals alive in the muck and mire of reality?

If our ideals are still there, perhaps hidden beneath the layers that decades of responsibility, work, fatigue, and the need to take care of personal matters have deposited, we can resurrect them. We can revitalize their tenets with the bolder judgment and broader understanding wrought by experience and maturity. We can still return to the fight we abdicated with the demise of the Great Society.

1. Political action.

We now know that marching in the streets has less of a lasting effect than the power of the voting booth and the closed door deals of professional politicians. Although many have fallen along the way, including some of the best and brightest, the boomers still have tremendous numbers and therefore significant potential political power. As our involvement in work and careers starts to taper off, we can use our newly found time to participate in the political process: listening, organizing, contributing, and supporting those who represent that new society we still so desperately seek. For us, the infringement of civil liberties generated by the Patriot Act and the horrors of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay demand that questions be asked, motives revealed, and expected outcomes honestly assessed. We can still throw off the conservative shackles of age we have unwittingly donned and re-enter the fray: as candidates, as volunteers, as individuals who demand accountability and justice from those in power.

2. Community action.

Supporting and fighting for civil rights no longer requires travel to the Deep South nor marching through the streets. The struggle now permeates all levels of our society: the workplace, the schools, the churches, the home. Community involvement may range from active support, to speaking out, to neighborhood organizing, all in the knowledge that our better world starts right outside our front door. Racial profiling, bias against those of Middle Eastern descent, and widely administered wiretaps confront us in our own corner of the world. An African-American child in a schoolroom without enough books, without internet access, without afterschool programs, without personal safety and a quiet academic atmosphere, is as cheated of his natural human heritage as his forefather in the back of the bus. A gay couple denied the social and financial benefits of married straights are as much the victims of prejudice as their forbears in their proverbial closets. A poor urban neighborhood without basic resources: libraries, museums, music, culture, is as disadvantaged in the modern age as in the shameful shanty towns of old. We may feel a lack of power to sufficiently effect a national change of direction but in our local communities the power is there for the taking if we choose to assert our energies and our concerns.

3. Personal witness.

We need to practice constant vigilance to bear witness to our beliefs. We must repeatedly re-assess ourselves to ensure that we have not inadvertently bought into the bias and prejudice that colors so much human thought. We cannot stand silent while others talk or joke about ethnicity, or religion, or sexual preferences. The need to get ahead does not require the sacrifice of all that we hold dear -- the winner of the rat race is, after all, a rat. We must consider our families and ensure that our children are fully exposed to the potential and worth of every individual, no matter how different from us they may appear. Our expectations and demands of coworkers and subordinates needs to be fair and consistent, regardless or race, gender, or cultural differences. We can stand up and speak out, letting all know that nothing less than equal opportunity and fair evaluation will be tolerated in our personal sphere. We will continue to look for quality of character, knowing that little else matters.

As each generation ages, the qualities it represented in youth tend to dissipate. With the addition of multiple personal and occupational responsibilities and the acquisition of assets and at least a degree of wealth, the earthquake of social revolution is no longer a promise but a threat. We jealously guard what we have worked so hard to obtain. We become a force for conservancy rather than a force for change.

The baby boom generation has the potential to shatter that familiar pattern. Born on the cusp of the most horrifying war the world has ever seen, we continue to represent an opportunity for the world to evolve, for mankind to rise above the baseness of his bestial nature and to internalize the human capacity for true civilization. As we enter the autumn of our lives, we are presented with the opportunity to finally, and lastingly, make a difference. It is up to us to stand together now, as many years ago we stood in the streets of Chicago, Washington, and Birmingham, for the rights and liberties of all.

Virginia Bola is a licensed clinical psychologist with deep interests in Social Psychology and politics. She has performed therapeutic services for more than 20 years and has studied the effects of cultural forces and employment on the individual. The author of an interactive workbook, The Wolf at the Door: An Unemployment Survival Manual, and a monthly ezine, The Worker's Edge, she can be reached at http://www.virginiabola.com


MORE RESOURCES:

MSNBC

Palin's Family Has Always Held a Place in Her Politics
Washington Post, United States - 11 hours ago
But the incident shows the degree to which family and politics are bound together in Palin's career. Of the many striking images of Palin -- sportswoman, ...
Video: Joe Biden On Palin's Speech CBS
Biden: leaving children out of politics is 'about common decency' CNN Political Ticker
Are politicians' kids off-limits? Denver Post
Dallas Morning News - phillyBurbs.com
all 1,012 news articles


2 weeks, 2 cities and lots of politics
Indianapolis Star, United States - 10 hours ago
I'm somewhere between Minneapolis and Indianapolis as I write this, on a plane filled with the likes of Mayor Greg Ballard, ABC political star George ...
Just for fun: trying Bayh's shoes on for size Indianapolis Star
all 2 news articles


Voice of America

Playing politics with family values
Boston Globe, United States - 11 hours ago
What the Palin family story does do is underscore the flaws in the political philosophy that was critical to her being selected by John McCain. ...
Rural identity politics Atlantic Online
Washington Post National Political Reporter Washington Post
Supermom captures the heart of America Mirror.co.uk
CounterPunch - Irish Times
all 1,298 news articles


CBS News

McCain, Obama plan joint 9/11 stop
Detroit Free Press, United States - 16 hours ago
John McCain and Barack Obama said today they will put aside partisan politics for a joint appearance Thursday at the World Trade Center site to mark the ...
Obama and McCain to Make Joint Sept. 11 Visit to Ground Zero Washington Post
McCain, Obama plan joint stop at Ground Zero The Associated Press
MyGoodDeed.org Calls Plan by Obama and McCain to Appear Together ... MarketWatch
PoliGazette
all 314 news articles


Multitasking Moms Weigh Palin's Politics, Spirit
Hartford Courant, United States - 9 hours ago
Added Regan: "I can't see past her politics." Although she is a registered Republican and will probably support John McCain, Regan defines herself as a ...
Lipstick Politics: Sarah Palin, The Republicans and voting in the ... Seattle Post Intelligencer
McCain pick puts politics before nation's interests Port Huron Times Herald
Change Agents Financial Sense Online
WalesOnline - The Jersey Journal - NJ.com
all 690 news articles


Reuters Politics Summary
Washington Post, United States - 4 hours ago
TERRE HAUTE, Indiana (Reuters) - Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama warned the elderly on Saturday that Republican rival John McCain would put ...


National Catholic Reporter

Religion Is Politics ...
Atlantic Online - 21 hours ago
and politics is religion. With Sarah Palin, America has taken one very large leap toward a completely theocratic politics. For Palin, as for Rick Warren, ...
In Palin’s Life and Politics, Goal to Follow God’s Will New York Times
Palin's emergence in race for White House injects religion into US ... The Canadian Press
How religion guides Palin Chicago Tribune
TPM - ScienceBlogs
all 468 news articles


Seattle Post Intelligencer

Politics Examiner
Examiner.com - 4 hours ago
He has been covering national politics for the last two years, serving as head political writer at the Scepter. Here he will write about the story not being ...
Inside Politics: Murky allegiances Greeley Tribune
Editorial: The best choice, or best politics? Worthington Daily Globe
GOP convention returns to politics HeraldNet
WWMT - AfterEllen.com
all 1,329 news articles


CBS News

CSI: Politics
New York Daily News, NY - 7 hours ago
After two political conventions in two weeks, I get it. The twain shall never meet because the parties would go out of business. ...
Reuters Politics Summary Washington Post
Putting aside partisan politics World Magazine
Obamamania: the politics of change? renewamerica.us
Wall Street Journal - Technocrat.net
all 1,655 news articles


Washington Post

Washington Post: Palin's family has always held a place in her ...
The Capital Times, WI - 2 hours ago
But the incident shows the degree to which family and politics are bound together in Palin's career. Of the many striking images of Palin -- sportswoman, ...
Progressive Politics Examiner Examiner.com
all 1,558 news articles

Politics - Google News

home | site map
© 2006