It is always a good thing to enter the polling place on the voting day. People of all ages vote and express their opinions. Some older community members went out of the booth and some middle-aged parents went in to replace their position. School buses from local high schools have lost a large number of elderly people in the 12th graders who were eager to vote for the first time. There are other young people and friends who are talking about ways to vote for various problems.
The media explained that the millennium generation is "politically correct", but this is mainly wrong. Political correctness has existed for decades. The difference is that due to the Internet, the Millennial generation is constantly being exposed to new ideas of equality and impartiality. Sometimes, a millennium generation very enthusiastic about these important political issues may erroneously correct the language they think is aggressive. Essentially, the Millennial generation is no longer crazy as other generations, but it can be a bit more sensitive to certain words.
Many people want to know the impact of the millennium on politics. Studies discussed at a recent workshop should give Americans a cautious and optimistic attitude towards future citizenship and political participation of the millennium generation. The Millennial generation is a promising generation that believes in the power of communities (online and digital) and the Web. Millennial generation represents demographics born from the early 1980s to the beginning of the 21st century. As a group, they matured in times of turbulent change. 9/11, the Great Depression and ICT changes changed every aspect of people's daily lives. The birth of the world's Mireniar generation is almost indistinguishable from the world they currently live in. There are many questions about what this group can do politically and how it will be accomplished.
Whenever there is a dialogue about millennium politics, popular culture, psychology, or urban poverty, the moral background of the millennium will cause a slow discussion. Does the millennial generation have its own value system? Regardless of whether it is in a sense or not, do they hate or dislike so-called "traditional" values? The truth is that each generation has created its own set of values and norms. They disbelieved, they reasoned, they refused, they regret, they reformed, and sometimes they rediscovered. After all, they may even get older, and in a way it is an obstacle to find that they are very similar to their parents. Recollections of the anger of the 1960s and 1970s are now our grandparents and their parents and their value is today's tradition. Yes, all generations adjust the values rooted in traditional values, reflecting the norms of youth and ethics of transformation.