We Have Not Lost a
Generation to Liberalism
By Lloyd Marcus
King syrup and mom's
homemade biscuits for dinner. We five Marcus kids, of which I am the oldest,
loved it. It never dawned on us that our great dinner was due
to Mom and Dad being low on funds. When we moved out of the government projects
in Baltimore City to our home in Pumphery, a black suburban community, it was
like moving to Disney World. I was around ten years old.
I met David and Charles,
who taught me how to make a bow and arrows. Nobody's eye got poked out. We
fished in Patapsco River. On Sunday afternoons, a majority of the community
swam "down the river." Years later, I learned that the river was
supposedly polluted. But I never heard of anyone suffering ill effects from
swimming and eating the fish.
We played baseball a lot
-- two bats, one ball, and various old gloves. There was always the threat of
Michael Avery hitting the ball into the woods. Then we'd lose it, and no more
baseball.
On Wednesday nights, Dad
drove us (Mom and five kids) to Bible study at his storefront church in
Baltimore City. Heading back home, there was a tiny doughnut shop just before
the Hanover Street Bridge. On occasion, without warning, Dad would push the
brakes. Then we knew we were in for a treat. Best I can remember, he purchased
a dozen assorted doughnuts. Let me tell you, we were happy.
So why am I rambling
about such nostalgia? My point is that in the past, it took far less to make
children happy and appreciative.
I am on the Rebuild
America Defeat Obama bus tour. At breakfast in a Michigan hotel, Mary and I
were discussing the final Romney/Obama debate. A twenty-something waiter, while
pouring our coffee, enthusiastically chimed in. What a great kid!
This bright young
go-getter said that what struck him most during the debate was Obama saying the
rich should pay more. He thought, "Why? Why should people be punished
for working harder?"
My waiter went on to say, "The problem with my generation is that too many of them
think they are entitled. 'Entitled' should be erased from their
vocabulary."
Folks, I wanted to give
that kid a bear hug right there in the middle of the restaurant. Instead, I was
extremely generous with my gratuity. Upon handing him cash, I said, "Thank you for not
being a liberal." This
young man gave me hope for our future. I would not be surprised to meet him
years later and learn that he had grown to own a chain of hotels or
restaurants. But such a scenario is possible only by firing Obama in November.
While my conservative
waiter was quite refreshing, I do not believe him to be unique. I do not
subscribe to the theory that liberalism has successfully infected a majority of
our youths with EMD (Entitlement Mindset Disease). Liberalism is incompatible
with the human spirit.
Despite liberal
teachers' stealth attempts to indoctrinate/infect our kids, beginning in
kindergarten and continuing through college, most humans are instinctively
conservative. Liberalism may seduce youths for a season. But upon hearing the
truth, seasoned with experience, most will eventually embrace conservatism.
Churchill said, "If you are young
and not liberal, then you have no heart; but if you are old and not
conservative, then you have no brain."
Obama is really counting
on his ability to "play" our youths -- exploiting the uninformed,
idealistic, and emotion-driven college voter. This is why he shows up at so
many colleges. Obama promises cheap tuition while killing the machine (private sector business) that would
provide jobs when these students graduate.
In typical Democrat
fashion, Obama deals with youths as one of his numerous idiot voting blocs. He
manipulates each group by creating an imaginary enemy out to get them. Then he
vows to protect them from the conservative/Republican monster supposedly
attacking their group.
This is admittedly anecdotal,
but I am increasingly hearing from youths who are "thinkers" who
realize that Obama is merely a con man peddling socialism. And they ain't
buyin' it.
I am telling you, folks,
youth turnout for Obama is not going to be anywhere near what it was in '08.
Obama-mania is over. I keep hearing the B.B. King song in my head: "The thrill is
gone! The thrill is gone away from you!"
So yes, kids today seem
to need more stuff than we did in my day to make them happy. Still, certain
truths regarding the human spirit are universal and timeless. For example:
self-esteem does not come from people giving you stuff. True self-esteem comes
from individual personal achievement. And that, my friends, is a foundational
principle of conservatism.
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