TradeNurkicNow
piss
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2008
- Messages
- 5,197
- Likes
- 679
- Points
- 113
Disappointed isn't exactly the right word for it.
My experience coming into political consciousness started when I was 15 with Bush being gifted the 2000 election by the Supreme Court, followed by 9/11, following by "They hate us for our freedom", followed by two wars, Guantanamo bay, illegal wire tapping, Enron, the housing bubble, and the bailouts.
Politics was a joke. It was obvious that the whole system was broke. Why wouldn't anyone just admit it?
Then someone did. Obama came along, told us that the system is broke and we can do it different. He was the only hope for change to have ever spoken to my generation directly. He used that to his advantage, got elected twice and continued the status quo. Was I disappointed? Sure. But it was more than that.
It was a reminder that the power structures in place are much more entrenched than one president can represent. It was a reminder that real change is as far from actualization than it has ever been. It was a reminder for my generation that if we wanted to play the game of real life, we had to learn to play by the rules of ruthlessness and lies.
It's a reaffirmation of "fuck it."
My experience coming into political consciousness started when I was 15 with Bush being gifted the 2000 election by the Supreme Court, followed by 9/11, following by "They hate us for our freedom", followed by two wars, Guantanamo bay, illegal wire tapping, Enron, the housing bubble, and the bailouts.
Politics was a joke. It was obvious that the whole system was broke. Why wouldn't anyone just admit it?
Then someone did. Obama came along, told us that the system is broke and we can do it different. He was the only hope for change to have ever spoken to my generation directly. He used that to his advantage, got elected twice and continued the status quo. Was I disappointed? Sure. But it was more than that.
It was a reminder that the power structures in place are much more entrenched than one president can represent. It was a reminder that real change is as far from actualization than it has ever been. It was a reminder for my generation that if we wanted to play the game of real life, we had to learn to play by the rules of ruthlessness and lies.
It's a reaffirmation of "fuck it."
