Editing 1686: Feel Old

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The {{w|United States presidential election, 2012|previous U.S. presidential election}} took place November 6, 2012 and eligible voters would have been just shy of seven years old on September 11, 2001. Megan similarly presumes (or at least is generalizing) that voters who were seven on 9/11 were old enough to retain that memory through adulthood.
 
The {{w|United States presidential election, 2012|previous U.S. presidential election}} took place November 6, 2012 and eligible voters would have been just shy of seven years old on September 11, 2001. Megan similarly presumes (or at least is generalizing) that voters who were seven on 9/11 were old enough to retain that memory through adulthood.
  
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Particularly for those who were of voting age on September 11, 2001, it might seem startling that by election day, 15 years will have passed since 9/11. This might be particularly so given how significantly 9/11 shaped American society in the years following the attacks. 9/11 was a significant political point in the elections following the attacks as well as in non-electoral politics (such as discussions over homeland security, military actions, etc.) It is also unusual in that there was only one new Presidency (Obama replacing Bush in 2009) in a fifteen year period; historically, an average of nearly three new Presidencies begin in every fifteen years (the 44th Presidency is scheduled to end January 20, 2017, nearly 228 years after the first one began in 1789). To realize that there are people who have reached adulthood and weren't even old enough to be aware of 9/11 when it happened is a stark reminder of the passage of time since the event. The {{w|United States presidential election, 2020|following election on November 3, 2020}}, was the first in which there were eligible voters who were born after 9/11.
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Particularly for those who were of voting age on September 11, 2001, it might seem startling that by election day, 15 years will have passed since 9/11. This might be particularly so given how significantly 9/11 shaped American society in the years following the attacks. 9/11 was a significant political point in the elections following the attacks as well as in non-electoral politics (such as discussions over homeland security, military actions, etc.) It is also unusual in that there was only one new Presidency (Obama replacing Bush in 2009) in a fifteen year period; historically, an average of nearly three new Presidencies begin in every fifteen years (the 44th Presidency is scheduled to end January 20, 2017, nearly 228 years after the first one began in 1789). To realize that there are people who have reached adulthood and weren't even old enough to be aware of 9/11 when it happened is a stark reminder of the passage of time since the event. The {{w|United States presidential election, 2020|following election on November 3, 2020}}, will be first in which there will be eligible voters who were born after 9/11.
  
 
The 9/11 attack was already used in [[647: Scary]] to make people feel old already back in 2009. At that time kids born after the event was old enough to discuss the event with adults which was what was scary for [[Rob]] in that comic.
 
The 9/11 attack was already used in [[647: Scary]] to make people feel old already back in 2009. At that time kids born after the event was old enough to discuss the event with adults which was what was scary for [[Rob]] in that comic.

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