- Joined
- Feb 19, 2017
I don't think the concept was unfathomable. I think it was more that it was their side of the political isle, so they turned a blind eye.
Possibly, but I also think the reason why so many from those generations cleaved to that side of the political isle was because they were opposed to the moral guardians in the Religious Right.
To them, a moral guardian was either a suburbanite Karen soccer mom who voted GOP because of low taxes and "muh decorum" or a Bible-thumping Evangelical Protestant hillbilly who thought listening to rock music, playing vidya games, and wearing Halloween costumes were degenerate behaviors worthy of eternal fiery damnation.
These Millennials and X'ers couldn't even fathom the possibility that they would become what they once hated, just under a different banner.
My parents and uncle are both center-left liberals and all three of them are Generation X'ers, and they can't seem to grasp just how much the game has changed and how the Religious Right is dead and irrelevant while the Left are the moral despots now.
I think part of it has to do with the fact we're from Appalachia, the most morally conservative part of the old Bible Belt (to the point of practically being a de facto regional theocracy during the Religious Right's heyday) and the only region where the Religious Right isn't completely spectral (even if it is in decline there)
The initial rise of the Woke Left and Anita's canonization was the "I wonder if we're the baddies?" meme but in real life.