Chattanooga Times Free Press

NOW COMES THE NAKED TRUTH

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WASHINGTON — “OK Boomer.” I hear that dryly dismissive phrase leveled at me quite a bit lately from Shawn McCreesh, the 27-year-old in my office.

It’s gotten so bad that I’ve stopped bothering to ask him to decode the mysteries of millennial behavior and taste, much less to decipher what makes the younger TikTok generation tick.

The Times Style section calls the phrase a declaratio­n of intergener­ational war.

“‘OK Boomer’ has become Generation Z’s endlessly repeated retort to the problem of older people who just don’t get it, a rallying cry for millions of fed up kids,” Taylor Lorenz wrote. It’s quickly been adopted by millennial­s as well.

Shawn OK-Boomered me Friday on the topic of Katie Hill, the 32-year-old freshman California congresswo­man who is openly bisexual and ran what Vice dubbed “the most millennial campaign ever.” Her promising career flamed out in a scandal that was both age-old and very millennial, in that it featured revenge porn, a throuple, sexual fluidity and dirty bong water.

Hill was a blast of fresh air on the Hill. And it is amazing that, after two centuries of men treating the political landscape here as a droit du seigneur playground, the one ensnared in an ethics investigat­ion about the new rules enacted last year on sexual harassment — barring lawmakers from having sexual relationsh­ips with staffers — is a woman.

Hill pointed the finger at her “abusive” loser husband, Kenny Heslep, who has been unemployed for the past five years, implying that he leaked the pictures and texts to Hill’s foes.

It turned out that one of the people responsibl­e for publishing Hill’s photos and texts is a Republican operative who worked for her opponents.

In her fiery exit speech, Hill gave her side: “The forces of revenge by a bitter jealous man, cyber exploitati­on and sexual shaming that target our gender and a large segment of society that fears and hates powerful women have combined to push a young woman out of power and say that she doesn’t belong here.”

She continued, “Yet a man who brags about his sexual predation, who has had dozens of women come forward to accuse him of sexual assault, who pushes policies that are uniquely harmful to women and who has filled the courts with judges who proudly rule to deprive women of the most fundamenta­l right to control their own bodies, sits in the highest office in the land.”

While I agree with Hill that there are double standards and that we still dwell in a misogynist­ic culture, I also think she should have realized that we’re operating under new rules now and that they apply to both sexes.

I reiterated to Shawn my bewilderme­nt that every millennial moment — even the most private — can be enjoyed only if it’s documented and uploaded God knows where.

He said that I was missing the forest for the trees: Youngs who can’t even imagine that they will one day run for office may already have racy shots somewhere out there.

He pointed to a viral text going around this past month as evidence that most young people have at least one picture on their phones that they don’t want to get out.

He said that iPhones and social media have so reshaped culture that older people would have to accept the new and sometimes naked reality. He had to agree with Rep. Matt Gaetz, the 37-year-old Florida Republican and Trump lap dog, who told Fox News: “This is an issue where a lot of millennial­s, I think, sympathize with Katie Hill because a lot of young people who grew up with a smartphone in their hands took pictures, sent them, shared messages and materials that are now recoverabl­e later in life.”

I get that young people are digital natives. But I had to offer a riposte to Shawn that, while society can be reshaped, human nature is immutable. What I learned from studying Shakespear­e is that the primary colors of emotions carry through the centuries.

There will always be vengeful exes and envious allies and ruthless opponents and double-crossing friends. Whether the messages are being carried by pigeons or pixels, you have to protect yourself — and your data. Don’t let our shiny new tools blind you to the fact that some horrible truths about humanity never change.

And don’t leave yourself vulnerable by giving people the ammunition — or the nudes — to strip you of your dreams.

OK, millennial­s?

 ??  ?? Maureen Dowd
Maureen Dowd

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