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America’s new young generation looks away from Europe

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
October 30, 2024
in Europe
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During the entire 90 minute debate between US Presidential candidates Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, I only heard the words “Europe” and “Ukraine” mentioned four times. 

Trump repeated his boast about forcing European nations to pay their “fair share” to NATO; Harris repeated the time-worn Democratic Party pledge that America will stand by its allies “as it always should, as a leader upholding international values and norms.”

That was all. Aside from Trump describing Viktor Orbán as a “tough person… smart” and the candidates jousting over who could stand up to Putin, there was no mention of Russia’s threat to Europe, or of global warming – a topic that the EU seems to regard with far more gravitas than the Biden White House, and certainly more than Trump. 

The fact is that over the past 50 years – and more recently due to large waves of immigration – the US populace has grown less European, and considerably less interested in Europe. 

Demographically, the population has changed radically over the past half-century. While first-generation immigrants to the US accounted for 6% of the population fifty years ago, now they total over 14%. 

According to a 2017 study “Americans are more racially and ethnically diverse” and  “the U.S. is projected to be even more diverse in the coming decades. By 2055, the U.S. will not have a single racial or ethnic majority”. 

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