Lodi News-Sentinel

2017 graduates, how will your story play out?

- Wade Heath grew up in Lodi. Reconnect with him: www.Facebook.com/wadewire

If I were to give a commenceme­nt address, it would go something like this.

Thank you administra­tion, faculty, distinguis­hed guests and of course, the class of 2017.

Today, we turn the page on this chapter of our life and start a new story. A story that we have been preparing, studying and training for. This new story should excite and thrill each of us. After all, it belongs to us and what we do next will impact what’s written moving forward.

As a graduating class that has always been plugged into the digital universe and can’t recall a time that America wasn’t engaged in a war effort somewhere in the world, our view of how things are and work is unique.

Having grown up with access to informatio­n at our fingertips, not knowing something is as solvable as a Google search. We’ve been surrounded by instant celebritie­s and reality stars our entire upbringing, in which people such as Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian are famous for being famous.

WADE HEATH

We are by and large more tolerant and open-minded than many of the generation­s before us and because of that, we hold the relationsh­ips we’ve cultivated with our tribe close to our hearts. Our squad goals are admirable, bae. (Pause for laughter). But as we start a new story we should proceed with caution. The world is a far different place than it was when we entered this institutio­n four years ago. The United States has never had more debt than it has right now. America continues to print money as a way to sustain the economy all while decent jobs have dried up.

Most entry-level positions now require some sort of experience in order to be considered for hiring, and on top of that, the competitio­n for such spots have become cutthroat.

Our generation is the most educated group our country has ever known and that is absolutely something to be celebrated. Sadly, it has come at the cost of well over 1 trillion dollars in student loan debt.

Home prices have now rebounded to pre-market crash levels, and if you do end up getting a job with that degree you earned, don’t expect to rake in the cash as millennial­s are earning 20 percent less than our parents did at the same time in life.

We must understand that in order to succeed in this new America, we need to stop listening to the narrative we’ve been told works and create a new narrative that actually does.

It needs to be said here and now: The American dream as we know it is dead.

We are facing an adverse political situation in this country where two parties have stopped standing on principle and have degenerate­d into little more than disrespect­ful, selfintere­sted mirrors of one another.

The America that once was had always looked to the individual for solutions. Government has never solved anything or made life easier for anyone. Globally, terrorism remains a consistent issue as does conflict among people of differing faiths and beliefs. The world economy is also so fragile that any small event might send it spiraling out of control.

To say things look bleak would be an understate­ment.

But I am here today to let you know there is still a flicker in the candle. There is still a light to guide us out of the darkness and that light lives within our generation. While our window is definitely closing, we still have a shot at changing the world and our homes for the better.

We have just become the largest living generation. Our influence and power has yet to be tapped. But as we begin our new story, we must not allow it to be hijacked by radicals of any ideology. People that tell us if we just make concession­s on a few of the truths we hold close, that we can have something else for the trouble. Don’t fall victim to the cult of personalit­y.

And along the same line, we must not silence those we disagree with. Because sometimes those that disagree with us force us to question our beliefs and either strengthen our position or help us to understand that there might be a better way.

Remember, class of 2017, no one owes us anything and we are entitled to nothing. Because anyone that can give us something can also take it away. We have the power now. We are responsibl­e for the story waiting to be written. It’s up to us to use the pen with honor, bravery and kindness. If we come together and trust one another, there’s no telling the type of bestseller we’ll create.

Rise up, graduates, the world needs us now more than ever.

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