Random
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Young men swung HEAVILY towards Democrats in the latest elections in VA, NJ and NYC. Republicans are probably done for.

Just months ago, it looked as if young men were drifting permanently rightward, leaving Democrats scrambling for a way to reach them. But this month’s elections told a more complicated story. Young men in America are navigating a political identity crisis shaped by broken promises: decades of war, a volatile economy, and a labor landscape transformed beyond recognition. Into that void stepped a cottage industry of opportunists selling grievance, control, and a darker sense of belonging. Democrats, for too long, seemed unable to imagine a future that included these young men at all.

But the latest elections in Virginia, New Jersey, and New York City suggest the party may have finally learned something. Instead of leaning into culture wars or abstract ideals, Democrats ran campaigns laser-focused (for once) on affordability - on the rising cost of simply trying to live a stable adult life. That message resonated with young men who are struggling, not unlike everyone else, under the weight of high housing costs, unstable careers, and a sense that independence is slipping out of reach.

The result: young men broke decisively for Democratic candidates. These elections showed they were never lost, only overlooked. When Democrats grounded their politics in the everyday pressures people actually face, young men found a place in the coalition - and a reason to believe again.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
idontcareok · 70-79, M
amazing a non-American wrote this post and 2 non-Americans commented lol
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
@idontcareok Amazing? It is the world wide web we're on.
idontcareok · 70-79, M
@FreddieUK very true, but just funny all non-americans mostly talk about the USA not where they live or about other stuff
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
@idontcareok Check out my posts for proof that you are wrong.

Oh, and a lot of other 'foreigners' posts as well.
idontcareok · 70-79, M
@FreddieUK meant g7 all 9 posts
G7J2O · 36-40, MNew
@idontcareok
meant g7 all 9 posts
Except you're wrong there as well (for what it's worth).

Also, the fact that you have no comment except calling out us "non-Americans" as if it's some sort of crime kind of shows that what we write hits uncomfortably close to home for you...
RedBaron · M
@FreddieUK Posts don’t prove anything. They’re mostly just opinions.
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
@RedBaron Wrong. Check the context. They prove I and other non-Americans don't only post about US matters, which was the accusation I was rebutting.
@idontcareok You are proof that you can be American and have no idea what is going on in your own country. You are literally the best argument that citizenship has nothing to do with smarts or education.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow And it’s not supposed to. That’s partly what the Voting Rights Act was about.
@RedBaron What are you referring to here?
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
@ron122 You don't seem to understand that facts are not relative to your feelings and your belief system.
ron122 · 41-45, M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow You just can't help yourself. You must have no self-respect.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow That citizenship and the right to vote cannot be limited based on education, intelligence, race, or other random criteria.

That’s why the Voting Rights Act was adopted.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow So you know better than anyone else and consider yourself superior.
@RedBaron I at no point suggested otherwise.

@idontcareok and @ron122 constantly claim that anyone who is not American is incapable of understanding basic high school level concepts of law and that being born American magically make them experts on US governmental procedure because their feelings say so.

I merely pointed out facts and the ability to read is not geographically dependent and that you can still be American and be an idiot.

At no point did voting rights ever come up.
@RedBaron I am educated and bothered to learn basic facts. That doesn't make me superior it makes me educated and facts don't change based on the feelings of some Trump fans. Sorry.
@RedBaron And your tangent about voting rights suggests a reading comprehension issue on your part, or you just assumed you knew what was being discussed. Either is not great.
RedBaron · M
@PicturesOfABetterTomorrow It’s not a tangent considering your reference to the basis of citizenship.

And you might consider toning down the hostility and pedantry. They do the opposite of amplifying your intellect.
@RedBaron It is an irrelevant tangent because it literally has nothing to do with what is being discussed.


I don't coddle fools.