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	<title>Comments on: Our Kids are Practicing What They Preach</title>
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	<description>Helping our families and businesses to thrive the &#34;new urbanism&#34; way</description>
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		<title>By: Nick</title>
		<link>http://newurbanmom.com/our-kids-are-practicing-what-they-preach/comment-page-1/#comment-788</link>
		<dc:creator>Nick</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Jan 2009 06:01:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://newurbanmom.com/?p=690#comment-788</guid>
		<description>Hi!

     Thanks for the great article.  I think while the video is definitely interesting, there is also a definite feeling of negativity towards my generation (millennials) in the general public.

     It&#039;s really hard for some members of older generations to understand why exactly we spend so much time &quot;online&quot; and &quot;talking to our friends&quot; when it&#039;s completely backwards of the way they used to do it.

     We literally have lived through an amazing jump in technology - from the brick-cell phones to ones that rival Star Trek technology.  From AOL 2.0 to Facebook, Twitter, Gmail...  it&#039;s outrageous the sorts of things we&#039;ve seen come about in the last 20 years.

     I&#039;d like to think that we&#039;re all in this together - and you mentioned that we&#039;re going to be the largest voting block by 2016.  But the sad fact is that many of us forward-looking youngins didn&#039;t vote for the guy who wants to protect the environment, but the guy who was looking to pull a few million barrels out of Alaska for profiteering companies.

     As cool as it is to have Obama blogging, releasing weekly podcasts, and Twittering, it just didn&#039;t seem to connect with a lot of us for whatever reason.  Every election definitely won&#039;t be as high-tech as this, and Obama certainly should be applauded for his efforts, he really whomped McCain in technology use.  I guess what it means is that even millennials are still susceptible to the same R&#039;s and D&#039;s that have been around for years.

     I think, and here&#039;s what I&#039;m really hoping for, that Twitter and our online social movement will enable a third party or a fourth party, outside the R&#039;s and the D&#039;s to really be feasible in the near future (let&#039;s say with in the next 20 years)...

I&#039;d really like to see that.  And if it does... watch out, America.  Armstrong 2024!

-Nick Armstrong
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi!</p>
<p>     Thanks for the great article.  I think while the video is definitely interesting, there is also a definite feeling of negativity towards my generation (millennials) in the general public.</p>
<p>     It&#8217;s really hard for some members of older generations to understand why exactly we spend so much time &#8220;online&#8221; and &#8220;talking to our friends&#8221; when it&#8217;s completely backwards of the way they used to do it.</p>
<p>     We literally have lived through an amazing jump in technology &#8211; from the brick-cell phones to ones that rival Star Trek technology.  From AOL 2.0 to Facebook, Twitter, Gmail&#8230;  it&#8217;s outrageous the sorts of things we&#8217;ve seen come about in the last 20 years.</p>
<p>     I&#8217;d like to think that we&#8217;re all in this together &#8211; and you mentioned that we&#8217;re going to be the largest voting block by 2016.  But the sad fact is that many of us forward-looking youngins didn&#8217;t vote for the guy who wants to protect the environment, but the guy who was looking to pull a few million barrels out of Alaska for profiteering companies.</p>
<p>     As cool as it is to have Obama blogging, releasing weekly podcasts, and Twittering, it just didn&#8217;t seem to connect with a lot of us for whatever reason.  Every election definitely won&#8217;t be as high-tech as this, and Obama certainly should be applauded for his efforts, he really whomped McCain in technology use.  I guess what it means is that even millennials are still susceptible to the same R&#8217;s and D&#8217;s that have been around for years.</p>
<p>     I think, and here&#8217;s what I&#8217;m really hoping for, that Twitter and our online social movement will enable a third party or a fourth party, outside the R&#8217;s and the D&#8217;s to really be feasible in the near future (let&#8217;s say with in the next 20 years)&#8230;</p>
<p>I&#8217;d really like to see that.  And if it does&#8230; watch out, America.  Armstrong 2024!</p>
<p>-Nick Armstrong</p>
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