Graduation season is upon students, and Representative James Talarico (D-TX) stood before graduates at Paul Quinn College last weekend and spotlighted that their frustration with America is exactly what the country needs right now.
Paul Quinn, located in Dallas, is the oldest historically Black college or university in Texas, and Rep. Talarico used the occasion to deliver a candid assessment of the economic and political landscape facing the graduating class.
He opened by cataloging the weight this generation has carried: a pandemic, an insurrection, natural disasters, the rise of artificial intelligence, mass shootings, and mass deportations, all consumed through screens at a relentless pace.
"You have scrolled through more suffering, more division, more chaos than any generation in human history," Talarico told the crowd.
I just gave the commencement address at Paul Quinn College — the oldest HBCU in Texas.
I told them: “You have scrolled through more suffering, division, and chaos than any generation in human history.
But as painful as it may be, your disillusionment is a superpower." pic.twitter.com/B5z3KCSfHK
— James Talarico (@jamestalarico) May 3, 2026
Continued Acknowledgment
From there, he turned to economics. Talarico pointed out that while roughly 90 percent of baby boomers went on to out-earn their parents, that figure has dropped to around 50 percent for millennials, and is even lower for Gen Z.
For Black Texans specifically, he noted, the wealth gap is even more severe, with Black families holding about one-tenth the wealth of their white counterparts and being half as likely to own a home.
Talarico placed the blame squarely on five decades of trickle-down economic policy, arguing the system has been tilted in favor of the wealthy at the expense of everyone else.
He contrasted the financial pressures facing young people, rising home prices, and unaffordable gas, with the headline-grabbing excesses of billionaires like Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and Elon Musk.
Although Talarico's message wasn't purely grim, he argued that the disillusionment his audience feels is not a weakness; it's a strength. Being disillusioned, he said, means being freed from false narratives, able to see the world clearly and imagine something better.
"Your disillusionment is a superpower," Talarico told graduates. "You can see the world as it is and dream of the way it ought to be."

