Millennials Rejecting Democrats Due To Spying
By Chriss Street
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Contrary to the main-stream-media’s claims that “Millennials don’t worry about online privacy,” research demonstrates young people are extremely sensitive about who has access and can engage in mischief with their digital lives. As Snowden’s spying disclosures continue, the blow-back against Obama and the Democratic Party is alienating this future dominant voting bloc.
As Millennials have reached voting age they favored John Kerry by 9% in 2004, Barack Obama by 34% in 2008 and Obama again in 2012 by 23%.
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The University of Southern California’s
Center for the Digital Future conducted
surveys in April to compare the differences in the opinions of younger and
older Americans about their right to digital privacy:
Both
American Millennials ages 18-34 by 70% and those over-35 people by 77% that “no
one should ever be allowed to have access to my personal data or web behavior.”
Only 25%
of Millennials agreed with the statement, “I’m ok with trading some of my
personal information in exchange for more relevant advertising.” Among the
over-35 group set, it was 19%.
The most
dramatic difference found was that 56% of Millennials would share their
location with companies in exchange for coupons or deals, compared to 42% of
the over-35 population. But that’s still nearly half who did not agree that
they would do so.
The poll
found that Millennials are more frequent users of social networking sites, by
48% vs. 20% of the over-35 population. But that should hardly be a
surprise since social media was designed by youth and can hardly serve as prima
facie evidence of a lack of concern about privacy.
A 2010
study by researchers at UC Berkeley School of Law, found that 83% of
Millennials had refused to give information to a business and 82% believed that
anyone uploading their photo or video should first be required to get their
permission. Americans 35 years were only marginally more opposed to such
information sharing.
As
journalist Wendy Grossman suggested regarding the future millennial
voters, “teens certainly do value their privacy; it’s just that their threat
model is their parents.” Teens may not be as worried about the
government or companies, because many do not have the historical knowledge or
perspective to worry about those “threats.” But they do live under
constant surveillance by their increasingly “helicopter-hovering”
parents.
Most
young people have not been within hierarchical organizations or other
structures of power, and they have not learned how various privacy violations
can reverberate across time and within professional communities. But
teens are engaged in a process of identity formation that
involves not only exploring different concepts of self, but presenting such
identities to others. This is something that teens have always done—but
today it’s done electronically. That is why identity experimentation
today has bigger privacy consequences than for past generations.
Social
media uses sophisticated techniques to trick Millennials into expecting they
are communicating with only a small set of people. When in reality,
social media corporations own and archive all the communications that have ever
moved across their platforms and sell the data to the highest bidders.
That is why the revelations by Snowden that the Obama Administration conspired
with social media corporations to get unlimited access to users digital lives
have become such a betrayal to Millennials.
Thanks to
Snowden, every Millennial now knows that Uncle Sam, just like 1984’s Big
Brother, is trolling all the servers of America’s largest internet and media
corporations. With disclosures that the U.S. government may be
surreptitiously turning on the cameras and microphones to spy on Millennials
with their own digital devices, the youth’s monolithic support of Obama and the
Democratic Party may be over.
CHRISS
STREET & PAUL PRESTON
Present:
“The Agenda 21 Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 10 to Noon http://www.kcnr1460.com/
Follow Blogs: www.chrissstreetandcompany.com & www.agenda21radio.com
Present:
“The Agenda 21 Radio Talk Show”
Streaming Live Monday through Friday at 10 to Noon http://www.kcnr1460.com/
Follow Blogs: www.chrissstreetandcompany.com & www.agenda21radio.com
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