Anonymous wrote:Yes, and we all wish the Dems picks someone else for November.....
Anonymous wrote:Sorry if this belongs in Politics but I would like it here.
If you have a 20something… Gen Z. Does your child have similar political views to you, or did they rebel, in which direction, is there some overlap, or are they comparatively less political?
Please try to keep it less about the politics itself and more about the dynamics of values differences, influences, and how you observe your kids coming into their own on how they perceive the world.
Anonymous wrote:We do talk politics regularly. DH is conservative and I am a moderate - (which today means I am unhappy in both parties).
We have one DC who will be voting for the first time this election. They align with DH on most things. My younger two are both in high school still. One is probably between me and DH, but still sees things black-and-white, and the other is left of me, pretty liberal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. My 19yo is pretty conservative. I am definitely not.
My younger 2 are TBD.
Love this!
Anonymous wrote:DH is R (fiscal concerns only, not socially)and I am a mod -R that switch to I just over a year ago. I am the typical swing voter and happy with any moderate R or D, doesn’t matter.
Three DH and they run the gamut- DS pretty R, DD- mod D and other DD- mod R.
I think the fact the DH and I have different opinions but can still talk and articulate for them why we vote the way we do is a benefit to them. Not all one sided and they can see the nuances better.