What are the ten
most significant historic events in your lifetime? The answer it seems will most
likely be defined by your generation and your race. When Pew Research Center
asked Americans the above question, researchers discovered that answers from members
of the same generation were quite similar while there were numerous differences
among the various generations.
Results of the research can be
found in an article titled “Americans Name the 10 Most Significant Historic Events of Their Lifetimes”and written by Claudia Deane, Maeve Duggan and Rich Morin.
For research purposes Pew
Research Center defined the generations as follows: (1) Members of the Millennial
generation were born from 1981 to 1998 and were 18-35 in 2016; (2) Members of
the Generation X were born from 1965 to 1980 and were 36 to 51 in 2016; (3)
Members of the Baby Boom generation were born from 1946 to 1964 and were 52 to
70 in 2016; (4) Members of the Silent Generation were born from 1928 to 1945
and were 71 to 88 in 2016; (5) Members of the Greatest Generation were born
from 1901 to 1927 and were 89 to 115 in 2016.
September 11, 2001, was named by
76% of respondents in all generations. This was followed by the election of
Barack Obama by 40% of respondents. Other events that made the Top Eleven
listing are: (3) the tech revolution at 22%, (4) JFK assassination at 21%, (5)
Vietnam War at 20%, (6) Afghanistan/Iraq wars at 17%, (7)
Moon landing at 17%,
(8) fall of the Berlin Wall/end of the Cold War at 13%,
(9) gay marriage at 11%, (10)
Orlando shooting at 10%, and
(11) Gulf War at 10%.
“The perceived historic
importance of the attacks on New York and the Pentagon, span virtually every
traditional demographic divide. Majorities of men and women, Millennials and
Baby Boomers, Americans with college degrees and those without a high school
diploma rate 9/11 as one of the 10 most historically significant events to
occur during their lifetime. And while they seem to agree on little else this
election year, the survey finds that more than seven-in-ten Republicans and
Democrats name the attacks as one of their top 10 historic events.
“The one exception to this
pattern is the views of blacks and whites. While the Sept. 11 attacks easily
top the list for whites, it shares the top spot with the election of President
Barack Obama among blacks. Similarly, the civil rights movement ranks behind
only the election of Obama and 9/11 on the list of most significant events for
blacks but is absent from the top 10 lifetime events for whites.
“Just as striking as the public’s
consensus on the impact of 9/11 is the steep drop-off in the proportion of
Americans who name other notable events. The election of Obama is the
second-most frequently named event, listed by 40% of the public. Every other
event is named by fewer than one-quarter of all adults. This includes the
changes ushered in by the internet, personal computers, smartphones and other
innovations of the tech revolution, the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and
the Vietnam War."
So, I am asking you to list “the
10 historic events that occurred during [your lifetime] that [you think] `have
had the greatest impact on the country.’” After you make your list, check this site to see if you agree with your generation. You can find lots of other
interesting facts on the site also.
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