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ksquared

03/03/19 6:29 AM

#289281 RE: HoosierHoagie #289280

lol... You caught that too.
Your Mama didn't raise a stupid kid.
I have to see if I can find out how the old the writer is.
It's a plot to make sure The (fading) Youth Generation is outnumbered.

A happy and blessed Sunday to ya, Tex.
Is it (relatively) cold down there?
TWC shows the upper Midwest getting record low highs.
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ksquared

03/03/19 6:47 AM

#289283 RE: HoosierHoagie #289280

Scott Warren is a full-fledged millidiot.
https://generationcitizen.org/our-team/staff/
He's head of Generation Citizen.

Scott Warren
Chief Executive Officer


Scott is the Chief Executive Officer of Generation Citizen. He co-founded the organization at Brown University with fellow student Anna Ninan during their senior year, working with students in the local Providence community. From that starting point in 2008, Scott has grown Generation Citizen to become one of the preeminent civics education organizations in the country, promoting Action Civics across diverse geographies through best-in-class programming and concrete policy change. Scott has served as a Social Entrepreneur in Residence at Brown University and Tufts University, and published a book in 2019, Generation Citizen: The Power of Youth in Politics.

Scott was named an Echoing Green Fellow in 2010, and a Draper Richards Kaplan Fellow in 2012. He continues to write on subjects ranging youth political engagement to African politics to sports, and has been published and featured in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, the Christian Science Monitor, Education Week, the New York Daily News, Huffington Post, San Diego Union Tribune, Sports Illustrated, Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Providence Journal.

Scott’s passion for the importance of youth political engagement stems from his experience growing up abroad. After his father joined the State Department, Scott lived throughout Latin America and Africa, learning about diverse cultures and peoples. In 2002, Scott served as an observer in the first truly democratic elections in Kenya’s history, where he began to recognize the transformative potential of democracy. He also witnessed a coup in Ecuador in 2005, and met with opposition members during run-off elections in Zimbabwe in 2008. These experiences persuaded Scott of both the fragility and power of democracy, a lesson he attempts to apply everyday as he builds and improves upon Generation Citizen’s work.