YAL doesn't do much anymore. I still get their emails from the chapter I was apart of. Now they're just holding meetings and watching documentaries. No on campus activism.
So, most of them graduated and are no longer on campus? Maybe YAL was an organic, authentic, organisation comprised of like minded individuals who held similar beliefs, particularly concerning the scope of government. These individuals have graduated, and left the campus to the next organic, authentic, organization (well you see where this is going, yes?) group comprised of individuals who hold similar beliefs, particularly concerning the scope of government.
The answer to why movements, particularly ones that are aged out of, seem to fail is in the future. The level of preconditioning the members of future generations receive, and concerning what behaviors, to a large degree dictates what
actions they will take, and how far they will take them. This is because said preconditioning happens concomitantly with education (the latter being the lesser aim) and makes up the
beliefs of every generation, which are the fuel of
action.
Education has become common core, a monopoly has been established that not only controls the content of preconditioning, but by dubious mandate increases the number of members subjected to its influence, that is more and more with every generation. Just as importantly this preconditioning begins in early education, when lessons are more formative-- especially those regarding authority and the order of the world.
These members (lol!) inherit the campus in their due turn, where they become the cutting edge of the future as though they are some kind of promissory note on how its going to turn out. And they are, so long as the preconditioning mechanism is successful in properly influencing the next generation.
YAL members aged out, and the freshman that came in behind them held different definitions. Beliefs, and also the lengths to which they are willing to go in acting on them.