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Sunday, February 21, 2016

RANDI WEINGARTEN: Talking 'bout our generations

Talking 'bout our generations:

Talking 'bout our generations


There comes an uneasy moment in the life of a longtime, anti-establishment agitator when one realizes that she's viewed as ... the establishment. While there's no "Question Authority" T-shirt under my blazer, I still question and push back on(and sometimes get arrested by) the authorities. Still, when younger Americans look at my generation and how we've fallen short on important issues of opportunity, equality and justice, I find myself on an unfamiliar side of a generational divide.
Who can blame younger Americans, millennials in particular? They're the most educated generation to date, but they're drowning in student debt. Many entered the workforce during the Great Recession and its long hangover--and economists say they, as a group, may never fully recover. No wonder they're anxious and angry--this generation may be the first in recent history to do worse than their parents. It's now about freelancing and the sharing economy--not home ownership and job security. No wonder only 8 percent of millennials have much confidence in Congress--type "do-nothing" and "Congress" into a Google search, and you'll get 51 million hits.
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Randi Weingarten at rally to reduce student debtWeingarten and fellow activists outside a 2013 Sallie Mae shareholders' meeting, where they called on executives to meet with students about college debt. Photo by Michael C. Campbell
That number may rise after last week, when congressional Republicans and Republican presidential candidates put politics above principle and laced their "condolences" upon Justice Antonin Scalia's death with defiant refusals to consider any candidate President Obama would nominate to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court. How ironic for so-called strict constructionists to decide that, in an election year, they can flout Article II of the Constitution, which requires the president to nominate and the Senate to confirm Supreme Court justices.
It's a reminder that for progressives' fights against injustice and intentional polarization to be effective, they must transcend generations. Take the civil rights movement, which at the height of its strength was a cross-generational movement. Ministers and rabbinical students, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters--young and old, of many races and backgrounds, pushed toward justice.
We must keep pushing toward justice together. Standing up against unequal and inadequate education is all our fight. Eliminating crushing college debt is all our fight. Confronting discrimination, and making the economy work for everyone, is all our fight.
America's labor unions wage these fights. Millennials understand that--a strong majority of people aged 18 to 29 surveyed by the Pew Research Center holds afavorable view of labor unions. Rightly so--union members earn better wages and benefits than nonunion workers. Unions allow workers to have a say in the Talking 'bout our generations: