That, in a nutshell, in my opinion, is what is happening right now.
Next month, from what I can see and hear, there will be huge numbers of people going to the polls and voting Republican.
Now, I have a question for you :
Did something miraculous happen in the past 23 months that has caused the American public to feel a tremendous wave of faith and confidence in the Republican party?
. . . Give me a break.
The American people will be voting against the Democrats, not for the Republicans.
In short, the voters will be telling the Republican Party :
"We have absolutely no faith in you. But right now, we hate the Democrats even more. So we're going to vote for you, even though we think you suck, because you are, quite literally, our ONLY other option."
I don't know about you, but if I knew that I only got a job because I was less objectionable than the other candidate, I wouldn't be feeling all that much like celebrating.
Now, mind, none of this is unique to the Republicans. Do you really believe that the Democrats won their sweeping victories in 2008 because the public liked the Democrats so much?
Come on. They won because the voters were feeling a wave of anti-Bush passion . . . Not that John McCain did himself any favors, especially when he selected his running mate.
Of course, after they win, the GOP isn't going to acknowledge any of this. They didn't in 1994. The Democrats didn't in 2008. Why should they now?
The Republicans, along with Limbaugh, Hannity, O'Reilly, Beck, et. al., are going to spin it quite differently. That's what politicians do.
I'm just urging people I know not to let themselves get taken in by the spin and the hype, and bear in mind the harsher reality of American voting patterns.
You know, a lot of my friends and co-workers have been talking about the elections, and a constantly recurring theme in these conversations is how much they dislike a candidate, but then they go on to say, "But I'd still rather have him/her than . . . "
This is, of course, the classic state of American politics. We're not trying to decide who we want in office. We're trying to decide who is the least objectionable.
Next month, from what I can see and hear, there will be huge numbers of people going to the polls and voting Republican.
Now, I have a question for you :
Did something miraculous happen in the past 23 months that has caused the American public to feel a tremendous wave of faith and confidence in the Republican party?
. . . Give me a break.
The American people will be voting against the Democrats, not for the Republicans.
In short, the voters will be telling the Republican Party :
"We have absolutely no faith in you. But right now, we hate the Democrats even more. So we're going to vote for you, even though we think you suck, because you are, quite literally, our ONLY other option."
I don't know about you, but if I knew that I only got a job because I was less objectionable than the other candidate, I wouldn't be feeling all that much like celebrating.
Now, mind, none of this is unique to the Republicans. Do you really believe that the Democrats won their sweeping victories in 2008 because the public liked the Democrats so much?
Come on. They won because the voters were feeling a wave of anti-Bush passion . . . Not that John McCain did himself any favors, especially when he selected his running mate.
Of course, after they win, the GOP isn't going to acknowledge any of this. They didn't in 1994. The Democrats didn't in 2008. Why should they now?
The Republicans, along with Limbaugh, Hannity, O'Reilly, Beck, et. al., are going to spin it quite differently. That's what politicians do.
I'm just urging people I know not to let themselves get taken in by the spin and the hype, and bear in mind the harsher reality of American voting patterns.
You know, a lot of my friends and co-workers have been talking about the elections, and a constantly recurring theme in these conversations is how much they dislike a candidate, but then they go on to say, "But I'd still rather have him/her than . . . "
This is, of course, the classic state of American politics. We're not trying to decide who we want in office. We're trying to decide who is the least objectionable.
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