Fair enough. I thought it was a clever allusion to a cartoon character. In some people's eyes, criticizing Obama is like hurting Bambi.
I didn't get it, either. But it's a very interesting point. To a lot of people (particularly, the establishment press) any criticism at all is some kind of outrageous insult. He's not just another politician, you see. He's their light-bringer, or whatever.

Says who? And if social conservatism is dead, why isn't fiscal conservatism equally dead?
Because people still overwhelmingly believe in private property. If you want proof, try to take something that is not yours, even from the greatest redistributors out there.
However, people no longer believe it is anybody's business what they do with their genitals and with whom. Again, if you want proof, go tell a woman where, how, and with whom she can have sex, and what contraceptives she should use if she is not looking to start a family right now.
Thank you for proving my point. I ask for evidence, and you give me speculation. You give me your odd idea of what social conservatism is about,* to make it seem like something outdated, but with no evidence that social conservatism is actually declining as a political force. Nor do you give me any reason why it can't make a comeback.
If the last election indicates that Americans want social liberalism, it also indicates (I think much more reliably indicates) that Americans want a centrally-managed, heavily-regulated economy. You talk as if the one can be reversed, and the other cannot. You don't seem to have a good reason why, other than it fits your own politics. You claim that the massive tide of immigrants (the crushing majority of them, in your phrase) can be assimilated into middle-class free marketeers. Yet you deny the possibility that young people can be assimilated into the same view on social issues that many of their parents and grandparents hold. What other reason can there be, except that it doesn't appeal to you, and you presume everyone else is like you?
Numbers are pointless if you ignore them, fistful. Why is Bambie leading by such margin among women, specifically young single women? What is your explanation other than abortion? Will you be willing to hold that explanation to the same degree of proof that you expect of mine?
Ignore them? Who's ignoring them? I'm the one asking for them. You're the one not using them to support your point in a meaningful way,
after making claims about what the numbers indicate.
You think young women vote a certain way for a particular reason, having to do with their lady parts. You think Hispanics vote a certain way for a particular reason, having to do with whether other Hispanics can immigrate more or less easily. Did it never occur to you that perhaps most young women just want a large, comfortable social safety net, just like most Hispanics do, just like most blacks do, just like a lot of white men do?
Now maybe those groups vote the way they do for the reasons you've stated. I'm just asking you to give me a reason to believe it.
*If social conservatism, in American politics, had anything to do with telling people what they can or cannot do in the bedroom, you might have a point. But you are talking about the sort of social conservatism (anti-birth control laws, anti-sodomy laws) that even social conservatives don't currently adhere to. So maybe your analysis makes sense IF social conservatives want to go back to that sort of thing. Where is the evidence that they do?
Social conservatism in American politics today consists of restricting or outlawing abortion, keeping homosexuality in the realm of private behavior (not govt.-endorsed behavior), and those are the only two that seem to be major issues right now. The rest amount to a few odds and ends, like getting public school teachers to stop hassling students for reading the Bible, and maybe getting to keep the Christmas manger scene on the county square.