Changing Demographics and The Future of America’s Historic Narrative

Hawk1981

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Apr 1, 2020
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The grand narrative of the story of the United States with its mixture of truth, myth, perception and interpretation has endured and served as a unifying force for the nation's people and culture. America's history reflects the needs of the people and the culture of the present. The narrative accounts for, adjusts to and assimilates the changes that occur over time with the demographics of language, religion, race, cultural rituals, and significant historical events.

The American epic has not been static. It has changed and will continue to evolve to meet the needs of America's changing demographics along with other significant events. The traditional American epic begins with the age of European exploration and includes as its important points the American Revolution, the Civil War, the conquering of the American West, America’s rise as a world power, the waves of immigration propelling its development, and its significant role in winning the two world wars and the subsequent Cold War. The traditional story becomes more muddied and non-linear the closer to the present it gets, but overall a beautiful, positive narrative of expansion and progress.

Changes in the telling of the American narrative have always occurred. Interpretations and perspectives have included, and continue to include, the traditional, the progressive, the consensus, the conflict, the economic, the great, the social, the left, the right, the social, and the list goes on. Social changes since the mid-20th century have dramatically increased the scope and opportunities for people previously left out of what had largely been a male dominated field. The gains that have been made in historical scholarship by including the work of minorities and women who have introduced new perspectives and new stories that had previously been undiscovered or ignored have been enormous. The American narrative is a richer and more complex story.

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Not only the story tellers have changed, but also the details of the story. Where once history was written largely through limited primary sources; letters, journals, diaries, and newspapers, and of course, secondary sources-what others had already written; historians have opened up a new universe of sources such as estate inventories, court documents, and even oral histories. The age of information and technology has made accessible mountains of data from the daily minutiae of people's lives, and available with astonishing speed. The rapidity and processing power of media has accelerated the rates of scholarly research and revision, and flung open previously closed doors to historical professionals and laymen.

In March of 2015, the US Census Bureau reported that by 2020 more than half of the country’s children will be minority race, and that this shift will take place for the population as a whole in 2044. Demographic trends indicate that the white American majority is declining. US Census Bureau data shows between 2010 and 2015, the white-only population (not Hispanic or Latino) decreased from 63.7 percent to 61.6 percent. During the same period, Hispanic or Latino, Black, and Asian populations all increased marginally, totaling 36.5 percent of the population.

Some of the effects of these ongoing changes in demographics are already reflected in conventional US history texts, including the blood on the hands of European-American colonists and settlers. For African Americans, the story covers the beginnings of the Atlantic slave trade, colonial slavery, slavery and Civil War, Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the struggle for civil rights in the 20th century. For other minorities, there are such episodes as the Trail of Tears, Wounded Knee, and the struggle of Latino migrant workers.

The American story is again being amplified and enriched with the stories of yet other peoples who have come to America. There's a whole new generation of children and their parents who are either descendants of immigrants or immigrants themselves, coming to America and enriching what it means to be American.

The future of America’s story, especially as a binding force, will likely have to accommodate new evolutions, interpretations and perceptions of the past. For example, the new population demographic may demand a story even more faithful to the struggles of peoples of color; additional years of study, discussion and negotiation may be required before the national original sin of slavery is finally redeemed; the origin stories of the new American generations and their experiences may supplant or marginalize the European exploration and colonial epic; the next generations will honor the relics of the past based on their needs, retaining or discarding the memorials, museums and statues according to their perceptions of history and cultural.

For the future American historical narrative and its potential success at strengthening our national bonds rather than our divisions, a crucial factor will be its legitimacy and credibility in the eyes of the coming generations of Americans.
 
It’s important to study the forces that are driving population change, and measure how these changes have an impact on people’s lives and their perceptions of their culture and history.

Americans are more racially and ethnically diverse than in the past, and the US is projected to be even more diverse in the coming decades. Over the next five decades, the majority of US population growth is projected to be linked to new Asian and Hispanic immigration.

America’s demographic changes are shifting the electorate – and American politics. There are wide gaps opening up between the generations on many social and political issues. Young adult Millennials are much more likely than their elders to hold liberal views on many political and social issues, though they are also less likely to identify with either political party: 50% call themselves political independents.

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This year Millennials will surpass Baby Boomers (born 1946-1964) as the largest US adult generation, and they differ significantly from their elders in many ways. They are the most racially diverse adult generation in American history: 43% of Millennials are nonwhite, the highest share of any generation.

While the US remains home to more Christians than any other country, the percentage of Americans identifying as Christian dropped from 78% in 2007 to 71% in 2014. By contrast, the religiously unaffiliated have surged seven percentage points in that time span to make up 23% of US adults last year. This trend has been driven in large part by Millennials, 35% of whom are religious “nones.”

The demographic future for the US and the world looks very different than the recent past. Growth from 1950 to 2010 was rapid — the global population nearly tripled, and the US population doubled. However, population growth from 2010 to 2050 is projected to be significantly slower and is expected to tilt strongly to the oldest age groups, both globally and in the US.
 
It’s important to study the forces that are driving population change, and measure how these changes have an impact on people’s lives and their perceptions of their culture and history.

Americans are more racially and ethnically diverse than in the past, and the US is projected to be even more diverse in the coming decades. Over the next five decades, the majority of US population growth is projected to be linked to new Asian and Hispanic immigration.


I got to disagree with this analysis. America has had different groups come to our shores since the beginning of the American experience.

But groups that arrived earlier are constantly assimilating as well. Waves of Slovaks and Swedes , Swiss and Serbs came and are now virtually indistinguishable from other Americans now. But for a while, they were different with different customs and there was antagonism between them and other Americans and between themselves.

There is no reason to think that hispanic people and others won't become "regular" Americans either
 
It’s important to study the forces that are driving population change, and measure how these changes have an impact on people’s lives and their perceptions of their culture and history.

Americans are more racially and ethnically diverse than in the past, and the US is projected to be even more diverse in the coming decades. Over the next five decades, the majority of US population growth is projected to be linked to new Asian and Hispanic immigration.


I got to disagree with this analysis. America has had different groups come to our shores since the beginning of the American experience.

But groups that arrived earlier are constantly assimilating as well. Waves of Slovaks and Swedes , Swiss and Serbs came and are now virtually indistinguishable from other Americans now. But for a while, they were different with different customs and there was antagonism between them and other Americans and between themselves.

There is no reason to think that hispanic people and others won't become "regular" Americans either
Though there is a lot in there to like and is true, this notion that history gets to change merely because of demographic shifts is absurd.....This is what jerks like Howard Zinn have been doing.
 
In my opinion, the future United States of America described very eloquently in the OP will be a failed state, characterized by corruption, violence, and disorganization.
 
It’s important to study the forces that are driving population change, and measure how these changes have an impact on people’s lives and their perceptions of their culture and history.

Americans are more racially and ethnically diverse than in the past, and the US is projected to be even more diverse in the coming decades. Over the next five decades, the majority of US population growth is projected to be linked to new Asian and Hispanic immigration.

America’s demographic changes are shifting the electorate – and American politics. There are wide gaps opening up between the generations on many social and political issues. Young adult Millennials are much more likely than their elders to hold liberal views on many political and social issues, though they are also less likely to identify with either political party: 50% call themselves political independents.

View attachment 349237

This year Millennials will surpass Baby Boomers (born 1946-1964) as the largest US adult generation, and they differ significantly from their elders in many ways. They are the most racially diverse adult generation in American history: 43% of Millennials are nonwhite, the highest share of any generation.

While the US remains home to more Christians than any other country, the percentage of Americans identifying as Christian dropped from 78% in 2007 to 71% in 2014. By contrast, the religiously unaffiliated have surged seven percentage points in that time span to make up 23% of US adults last year. This trend has been driven in large part by Millennials, 35% of whom are religious “nones.”

The demographic future for the US and the world looks very different than the recent past. Growth from 1950 to 2010 was rapid — the global population nearly tripled, and the US population doubled. However, population growth from 2010 to 2050 is projected to be significantly slower and is expected to tilt strongly to the oldest age groups, both globally and in the US.
Yea, everyone gets it.
Thanks for a fresh reminder.
The Left Wingers loath white people and Christians.
Did you know that hating other people for their race and/or religion is bigotry?
The problem for the Left Wingers is that they will never be happy, because they are all of the things that they profess to abhor.
They could burn every book and erase all the monuments and make every white person beg for forgiveness on their knees and it would not change history.
Erasing History is what extremist do> Chinese Marxist, Taliban, North Korea Marxist, Al Queda, Soviet Marxist, Latin American Marxist.....you people are dangerous brainwashed totalitarian fanatics.
When the Left Wingers do everything their way they bankrupt their city and state governments and create poverty and misery.
They drive the vital middle class taxpayers out of their bankrupt and backwards Blue states.
The Left Wingers might take-over some of the States but they won't destroy one of the world's most successful cultures.
 
Multiculturalism never works. Nations are homogenous and strong. Nations are held together by tradition, culture and shared history. Empires are forced associations of disparate people. Empires are weak. Empires fall.
 

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