Dean Barnett writes the definitive post on today’s Times poll on the attitudes of Americans aged 17-29. Barnett notes that the poll was cosponsored “by that most reputable of news agencies,” MTV, and then informs readers that he will analyze the numbers himself, “unguided by Adam [Nagourney’s] insights.”
Once again, I haven’t read Nagourney’s coverage, but I assume his lead derives from the results to this tendentious question: 50. Which do you think would be better for the country: 1. Having one health insurance program covering all Americans that would be administered by the government and paid for by taxpayers, OR 2. Keeping the current system where many people get their insurance from private employers and some have no insurance. 62% of the kids would opt for the socialist experiment of a single payer system. In a way, I guess this is good. I think it was Churchill who said “If you’re not a communist when you’re young, you have no heart. If you’re still a communist when you’re old, you have no brain.” Good to see the kids have their hearts in the right place, even if the phrasing of the question drove them to that particular place. What I found really interesting about the poll was Question 62. The question in question asked, “As a result of the United States’ military action against Iraq, do you think the United States is more safe from terrorism, less safe from terrorism, or hasn’t it made any difference?” 31% said “more safe”, 19% said “less safe”, 47% said “no difference” and 2% said “don’t know.” All I can say is, “Huh?” After being pounded over their young heads for half a decade that Iraq has been a fiasco on every level, the kids lean in the direction that it has made us more safe? Maybe the headline to this poll should be, “Old media’s influence increasingly marginalized.”
Go read the whole thing–it doesn’t get better than Barnett writing on “the self-esteem generation.”
