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For today's college-age generation, the world is a scary place Date published: 4/29/2007
GRAFTON--Police My peers and I have grown up in an unsafe and chaotic world, and if recent events are any indication, our situation won't be improving any time soon. We have endured much, my generation. We practiced hiding under our desks after Columbine, attended candlelight vigils for Oklahoma City, and watched in horror as the towers fell on Sept. 11. Now, more bloodshed, more loss, and more unanswered questions as we We know them; they're us. Our world gets no sunnier once out of Blacksburg, as the news isn't any better out of Iraq. Ages 20 through 22 years old rank as the top three ages of U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. All totaled, more soldiers between the ages of 19 and 24 have been killed in the War on Terror than all other ages combined. It's our friends, relatives, classmates, and teammates fighting this war and paying for its mistakes--and when they come home in flag-draped coffins, our world gets a little bit grayer. The hits just keep on coming. Our generation has come of age in the dark shadow of global warming, avian flu, roving interstate snipers, AIDS, West Nile virus, the USS Cole bombing, anthrax, sexual predators, weapons of mass destruction, the Axis of Evil, Y2K, shark attacks, dirty bombs, letter bombs, shoe bombs, oil crises, and a litany of other threats, fears, and dangers, each more ominous and deadly than the last. We are told that we are safe but not yet safe, that smoking guns will come as mushroom clouds, and that the worst is yet to come. Things, as they say, are not looking up.
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