‘Nobody 2016’ — The Campus Bumper Sticker That Helps Trump
‘Nobody 2016’ — The Campus Bumper Sticker That Helps Trump · The Fiscal Times

“Nobody 2016” stickers are all the rage at Colorado State University – summing up what a lot of Americans – and especially young Americans -- think about this election. Like it or not, millennials are receiving a crash course in ugly Politics101. Not only did their hero Bernie Sanders turn traitor by endorsing Hillary Clinton; they now know, thanks to Wikileaks, that Clinton colluded with officials of the Democratic Party to cheat and beat their man.

Worse yet, they are finding out that Clinton has sold them a bill of goods. More emails reveal that she isn’t on board the Sanders revolution, and never will be. As she has said to donors, away from microphones, “I occupy the center-left to the center-right.” From the same source, they now know that the media was complicit in undermining Bernie’s run, and is politically aligned. Most uncomfortable of all, the COO of Facebook, that millennial home-away-from-home, is in the tank for Hillary, too. Is nothing sacred, they must wonder?

Related: Sanders Supporters Seethe Over Clinton's Leaked Remarks to Wall St.

Meanwhile, they have heard GOP candidate Donald Trump utter words they know to be unacceptable, suggesting behavior towards women that they have been warned against in their schools and their workplaces. Countering those lewd remarks, Trump has introduced into the race the women who have accused Bill Clinton of abuse and rape, and made Hillary’s attacks on those women part of the campaign.

Can it get any worse? What does it mean for the U.S. that the next generation is coming of age politically in the midst of this election? It means even greater disillusionment with our government and, most likely, even lower voter turnout on November 8. In August, 60 percent of the 18-34 year old crowd, which numbers 75.1 million, 300,000 short of the Boomer count, said in a poll they would consider voting for a third-party candidate. That has likely declined at this point, but many apparently are still not committed to either Clinton or Trump. Consequently, millennial turnout could drop from the 2012 generation record high of 50 percent back to the 46 percent recorded in the prior two elections, or even lower. That could be a problem for Clinton.

Millennials are beginning to understand that Hillary Clinton wants their votes, but doesn’t want their problems. That goes for all American voters. Not just for those “deplorables” who support Donald Trump, or the folks she says need an “intervention” because they might vote for her opponent, but for ordinary people – like her security detail, whom she curses at in the foulest of terms, and often. (An intervention, by the way, is something you do for sick people – people with a drug or gambling addiction, for instance. Not for someone who disagrees with you.)