Your article, “Gen X Goes to Washington” (November 26, 2010) was great. I’m glad this topic is finally being discussed. The reality is that Generation X — being more relational, the first to get the Internet and home computer, and birthed in pragmatism — has always been involved in our culture. We have the highest educational levels of those generations before us, and most likely those after for the foreseeable future. We are very innovative and understand that we cannot live by myths or ideals. We are unwilling to lay hold of old narratives — ours is one of authenticity, that hope and change are the real nature of strengthening family, county, and economy.
One could say that Sarah Palin was the first to fire a shot at the old way of doing things, but Barack Obama also knew that those under 50 did not speak the same language as those over 50 — we have the past in remembrance but the future in view.
We don’t seek the same affirmation as Boomers, who are so in denial about what they actually did not accomplish. It is amazing to me they are unable to move forward and accept their expiration date. Facts are facts — each year you will see how unreal the Boomer legacy was, other than abortion and divorce.
Martin Cline
Seattle/Tacoma, WA
Good people, broken system
Your Talking Politics story on patronage at the Massachusetts Probation Department (“Double-Secret Probation,” December 24, 2010) shows precisely why the commonwealth needs to close the door on proposals to expand predatory gambling. The culture on Beacon Hill is incapable of objective analysis and transparency. It is painful to know that there are so many good people trying to make a difference in a broken system.
Kathleen Conley Norbut
Monson
Related:
Reading is fundamentalist, 'Tea' is for terrorism, Reed on the Arizona shootings, the Tea Party, and why Bob Gates might stick around, More
- Reading is fundamentalist
In 2009, liberals held firm control of the presidency, the US Senate, and the US House of Representatives. But there was one realm where conservatives dominated: the New York Times bestseller list.
- 'Tea' is for terrorism
A year ago, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) produced a memo outlining the growing threat posed to this country from right-wing extremists. It compared the situation to that of the early 1990s — which culminated in the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168.
- Reed on the Arizona shootings, the Tea Party, and why Bob Gates might stick around
Just days after the Arizona tragedy, the Phoenix sat down with Senator Jack Reed for a Q+A about the shooting, the Tea Party, and some troubling news out of Pakistan.
- What the health-care bill really means
On Tuesday, President Barack Obama signed the new health-care bill into law.
- Lynch’s left flank
US Representative Stephen Lynch has held Massachusetts’s ninth congressional district since 2001 — a fact that has irritated the state’s liberals ever since.
- Political Blind Items
Touchin' dinks and slippin' nipples
- Read 'em and weep
Teleprompter? I hardly even know her!
- The Big Ligotti
Like his homeboy Scott Brown, Boston's elephant in the room is poised to make noise beyond Massachusetts
- Chaos Theory
In less than two weeks, when Massachusetts voters elect Martha Coakley to the US Senate — let's not pretend that Republican state senator Scott Brown has any chance of pulling off the monumental upset — they will trigger a massive domino effect that has the state's political class buzzing with anticipation.
- Capuano for Senate
After a telescoped campaign, Massachusetts Democrats go to the polls Tuesday to choose a successor to a legend, Ted Kennedy.
- Time to end tolerance
I'd like you to think about something. Ever seen the bumper sticker: "Intolerance will not be tolerated"?
- Less
Topics:
Letters
, Barack Obama, Beacon Hill, Politics, More
, Barack Obama, Beacon Hill, Politics, Gambling, Sarah Palin, Letters to the editor, letters, baby boomers, Generation X, Talking Politics, Less