Will individuality erode community?

 

Rutger Hoekstra, a junior, considers patriotism, having children and religion as “very important” values. These views actually put Hoekstra in the minority among his generation.

According to an August 2019 poll by The Wall Street Journal, young generations consider values like those much less important than older generations do.

Views varied sharply by age. Nearly 4 out of 5 people (79%) who were 55 or older said patriotism was very important, compared with 2 of 5 people (42%) aged 18 to 38; two-thirds of people (65%) aged 39 to 54 said patriotism was very important.

Two-thirds of the older group recognized religion as very important, compared with fewer than one-third of the younger group.

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Complex laws, uneven enforcement creates confusion for teens

 

Aidan Phelps and Asa Wold, two 15-year-old freshmen, want to see the new movie Deadpool 2 this week. They could see it at Rosedale, Southdale or the Mall of America.

They decide to meet Friday for the 9:45 p.m. showing at Rosedale AMC. The movie ends at 11:45, and they plan to take an Uber home.

Since they would be in Ramsey County, and they are both 15 years old, they could be arrested for violating the curfew law.

But if they had seen the 9 p.m. showing at Southdale, they wouldn’t have to take that risk, because they would be in Hennepin County, where the curfew is midnight, though they’d violate curfew if they saw the same movie on Thursday night.

Any after-school movie at the Mall of America would violate curfew on Friday, when anyone under 16 is required to have a 21-year-old guardian with them after 4 p.m.

Curfews have been used since the Civil War and were revived in the 1950s and ‘60s, but it wasn’t until recent decades that most cities had imposed a juvenile curfew.

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