Shameless Agitator
Well-behaved women rarely make history.

This table shows the ages of each generation during the 2000-2024 Presidential Campaign years.

Generation

2000

2004
2008
2012
2016
2020
2024

Millennial (b. 1982-2003)

0-18

1-22
6-26
9-30
13-34
17-38
21-42

Gen X (b. 1964-1981)

19-35

23-39
27-43
31-47
35-51
39-55
43-59

Baby Boomer (b. 1943-1964)

36-57

40-61
44-65
48-69
52-73
56-77
60-81

Silent Gen (b. 1925-1942)

58-75

62-79
66-83
70-87
74-91
78-95
82-99

GI Gen (b. 1901-1924)

76-99

80-103
84-107
88-111
92-115
96-119
100-124

Please note that the entire Millennial Generation will be voting age by 2022 – congressional mid-term elections.
Previous posts:
Millennial Makeover, Part One – An Intro to Generational Archetypes
Millennial [...]

The following is from the book Millennial Makeover: MySpace, YouTube and the Future of American Politics by Morley Winograd and Michael Hais. It is part two of a series of posts. Read Part One: An Intro to Generational Archetypes. My application of these ideas to politics in my county will follow in later posts.
Part Two [...]

While I was sick last month, I decided to dive in to a new research topic, one I’ve wanted to explore in depth for a while now: social media and social networking. As I jumped around the internet, reading one site after another, I remembered a book I’d placed on my Amazon wish list: [...]

It took me a while to finish the Jacoby book. As much as I wanted to like it, I had to force myself to sit through each chapter. Her premise is strong and I agree wholeheartedly with the notion that anti-intellectualism has grown to alarming proportions in the United States. I had [...]

Categories: blog | Add a Comment

Well. It’s been a while since my last update.
I offer a litany of excuses:
I worked a week at the BOE helping them do their Logic & Accuracy testing on the voting machines then promptly caught a terrible cold from Mr. Shameless.
I attended the Blue Jackets’ two home Stanley Cup playoff games [...]