Article by WN.com Correspondent Dallas Darling In the United States, demographic factors have always played a major role in political revolutions. Indeed, the last two to occur were the Radical Sixties and Surprising Seventies which shook the political and military establishments to their very core. Peter Drucker, a social scientist, actually studied these two political revolutions, mainly their distributive factors of age, sex, income, gender and incidences of disease and death. His results were surprising. The biggest factor, for instance, was the Baby Boomer Generation, those born after World War II. Not only was the U.S. younger than it had been since the early 19th century, but 17 to 35...