To the young Republicans in attendance, the vernacular feels a bit cringe. “We don’t really use ‘woke’ as our term,” says Evan Masse, a student at the Community College of Rhode Island. Chris Johnson, the managing director of Young Conservatives for Carbon Dividends, likened its use to how an out-of-touch uncle might search for the words to describe a nephew at the Thanksgiving table. “I think a lot of older folks use it if they don’t really know what they’re referring to,” he says. “It’s a catchall colloquialism.”

Several young conservatives I spoke with at CPAC echoed some version of that criticism of party elders. Some worry that going so hard on “woke” — a term now used almost entirely derogatorily by Republican detractors — will turn off upcoming generations of voters already disinclined to support the GOP. Others simply said it had lost its meaning, as many once-favored slang terms do, when the septuagenarians in Congress started punctuating their Fox News hits with it. This next generation of GOP activists nevertheless support the principles behind the “woke” wars — the market basket of education- and gender-related policies being passed in red states across the country. They just really wish the Olds would stop saying “woke.”

  • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    I don't mean to temper your optimism, but this is exactly what was said about boomers too. They were considered a massive political break from their parents (WW2 vets). Boomers were rock and roll, they were hippies, they would run away from home to join a commune in the woods and drop acid. From the perspective of someone in the 70s, it seemed like a massive shift was imminent at any moment.

    And it didn't turn out that way, material interests always win. Maybe millennials won't have the housing security as boomers, so that may be the deciding factor.

    • familiar [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      It'll be the deciding factor for many of them to advocate for tepid social democracy that gets bumped around by fascism for decades as the empire declines, possibly winning a couple of reforms along the way.

      • SaniFlush [any, any]
        ·
        2 years ago

        I hate how I can’t hope for anything to be better than the worst case scenario. Score one for sinking into hedonism while I still have time I guess?

        • familiar [he/him]
          ·
          2 years ago

          It's only the worst case if you think the existence of the US is necessary for a socialist future, when the opposite is probably true.

          • SaniFlush [any, any]
            ·
            2 years ago

            I’m more worried about the mask off fascist hell hole slaughtering millions of people but yes

    • mazdak
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      deleted by creator