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A senior in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, Clara Gustafson is majoring in Science, Technology, and International Affairs with a focus on Technology and Security. After her...
Where do young people come down on questions of faith, values, and public life? How do they relate their values to public policy issues including education, economic inequality, and the environment? These questions, critically important for the 2012 election, are at the center of a campus conversation being organized by the Berkley Center and Georgetown University. This blog features an ongoing conversation about these issues between students selected as Millennial Values Fellows through a national competition. You can read and comment on their blogs here.
To learn more about the project, visit the Campus Conversation on Values page.
OTHER POSTS
Millennials on Social Media and Politics
November 15, 2012
Millennials on Social Issues and Diversity
November 12, 2012
Hira Baig (Rice) on Why the Presidential Election Matters to Millennials
November 7, 2012
Millennials on Religion and Interfaith Work
November 7, 2012
Ryan Price (Drake) on E Pluribus Duo
November 6, 2012
Mohammad Usman (DePauw) on Unpredictable Millennials
November 5, 2012
Millennials on Affirmative Action Policy
November 3, 2012
Seth Warner (Vassar) on What Happens as the "God Gap" Widens
November 2, 2012
Josina De Raadt (Dordt) on How Social Media Is Like Wii Bowling
October 31, 2012
Zachary Yentzer (Arizona State) on the Next Greatest Generation
October 29, 2012
Brice Ezell (George Fox) on Post-Racial America? Race, Millennials, and the 2012 Election
October 25, 2012
Tyler Bishop (Vanderbilt) on a Future of Hashtags #whatitmeansforus
October 23, 2012
Brice Ezell (George Fox) on How the People Can Heal a “Divided,” Partisan Nation
October 4, 2012
Hira Baig (Rice) on Religion and American Democracy
October 4, 2012
Tyler Bishop (Vanderbilt) on How It’s All About Relatability: Voter Turnout
October 3, 2012
Josina De Raadt (Dordt) on Mistaking Politics for a Hollywood Blockbuster
October 2, 2012
Mohammad Usman (DePauw) on the Internet Solution
October 1, 2012
>> more
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PUBLICATIONS (110)
INTERVIEWS (153)
A Discussion with Stephen Weir, Vice President for Global Development and Support, Habitat for Humanity
April 4, 2007
April 4, 2007
LETTERS (220)
Katalyn Voss on Compassion and Morality: Divergences in Perspectives from the Poor in Thailand and the United States
January 4, 2010
January 4, 2010
POSTS (61)
RELATED RESOURCES ON UNITED STATES
Clara Gustafson (Georgetown) on Racial Divides in America
August 9, 2012
Everyone wants to offer their opinion on everything. But no one is talking about all the issues when it comes to race in America. Some people talk about racial violence. Others talk about how the demographics of the country, and sub-sections of our country, are changing and how this is a great and necessary time to talk about race. Others are talking about how there are still race riots going on all over our nation and we need to figure out solutions. Still others, including many universities, are talking about how to be more inclusive and welcoming and quietly talking behind closed doors about the implications of the Affirmative Action hearing that will go before the Supreme Court in the fall. However, the majority of us aren’t having new, or all, of the conversations.
What I mean by new conversations is that many Americans thought that Barack Obama would be able to help us have a more meaningful and necessary discussion about race in our nation. He said in his March 18, 2008 speech in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
“Race is an issue that I believe this nation cannot afford to ignore right now. We would be making the same mistake that Reverend Wright made in his offending sermons about America- to simplify and stereotype and amplify the negative to the point that it distorts reality.”
However, Obama hasn’t talked about race. I consider myself an Obama supporter; but I would say that one of his biggest promises upon which he has not delivered was a new and nation-wide dialogue on race. It is an incredibly politically charged issue and I understand why he hasn’t talked about race more. As a black politician in America he would have a very challenging time talking about and addressing issues through a racial focus without seeming, to the majority of Americans, like he was catering to the black community. Furthermore, one could argue that he shouldn’t have to just because he’s black. Why should he have the burden of re-framing the dialogue around race in America? I would say he doesn’t have to, but it is an opportunity to do so. An opportunity he hasn’t taken.
While Obama hasn’t led the charge on having a new discussion about race in America, our demographics continue to change. There are people now personally confronted with race who have never even thought about race before, because there are now Hispanic families in their schools or in their neighborhoods. There are estimates that the US will be fully a minority country by or before 2050, the Smithsonian says:
“Whites will no longer be in the majority. The U.S. minority population, currently 30 percent, is expected to exceed 50 percent before 2050. Latino and Asian populations are expected to nearly triple, and the children of immigrants will become more prominent. Today in the United States, 25 percent of children under age 5 are Hispanic; by 2050, that percentage will be almost 40 percent.”
These demographic changes will make the US one of the only racial minority countries in the world. From the very beginning we have been a country of immigrants, but how and why different racial groups came to America continues to have implications for how we do and don't talk about race.
“Race is an issue that I believe this nation cannot afford to ignore right now. We would be making the same mistake that Reverend Wright made in his offending sermons about America- to simplify and stereotype and amplify the negative to the point that it distorts reality.”
However, Obama hasn’t talked about race. I consider myself an Obama supporter; but I would say that one of his biggest promises upon which he has not delivered was a new and nation-wide dialogue on race. It is an incredibly politically charged issue and I understand why he hasn’t talked about race more. As a black politician in America he would have a very challenging time talking about and addressing issues through a racial focus without seeming, to the majority of Americans, like he was catering to the black community. Furthermore, one could argue that he shouldn’t have to just because he’s black. Why should he have the burden of re-framing the dialogue around race in America? I would say he doesn’t have to, but it is an opportunity to do so. An opportunity he hasn’t taken.
While Obama hasn’t led the charge on having a new discussion about race in America, our demographics continue to change. There are people now personally confronted with race who have never even thought about race before, because there are now Hispanic families in their schools or in their neighborhoods. There are estimates that the US will be fully a minority country by or before 2050, the Smithsonian says:
“Whites will no longer be in the majority. The U.S. minority population, currently 30 percent, is expected to exceed 50 percent before 2050. Latino and Asian populations are expected to nearly triple, and the children of immigrants will become more prominent. Today in the United States, 25 percent of children under age 5 are Hispanic; by 2050, that percentage will be almost 40 percent.”
These demographic changes will make the US one of the only racial minority countries in the world. From the very beginning we have been a country of immigrants, but how and why different racial groups came to America continues to have implications for how we do and don't talk about race.