Re: Love It or Leave It

2004-11-05 Thread R.A. Hettinga
At 6:34 PM -0800 11/4/04, Bill Stewart wrote:
I have to agree with the critics of Kerry who said
that he was aloof and out of touch with Middle America

.. and it's a big middle this year:

http://www.newsmax.com/images/headlines/BushCountry04Map.jpg

Of course, there's the nuanced version, but, hey, it's a winner-take-all
country, ain't it?:

http://www.princeton.edu/%7Ervdb/JAVA/election2004/

Proportional representation is for Europeans, of course...

In the meantime moby should learn to spell...

Channeling Andy Jackson this evening,
RAH

-- 
-
R. A. Hettinga mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation http://www.ibuc.com/
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience. -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'



Re: Love It or Leave It

2004-11-05 Thread Bill Stewart
Bob continues to forward entertaining and occasionally insightful articles 
to the list.

From the bluesy side of the fence, Moby wrote:
 can someone remind me why secession is not an option at this point?
Meanwhile, on the Commie-colored side of the fence,
Mike Thompson of HUMAN EVENTS ONLINE
took several weeks to write a modest proposal to
kick the states that didn't get with the program out of the union.
Those of us who remember the Vietnam-era redneck taunt about
America: Love It or Leave It also remember that if anybody
*did* leave, the right wing got immensely offended by it
and wanted to hunt them traitors down like dawgs.
Then of course there was that unpleasantness of the
War Between the States, aka the War of Northern Aggression,
in which the Red States left because they didn't like the
liberal northerners and their activist judges and politicians
disrupting the core of their traditional values,
and the Blue States insisted that Nationalism was
more important than the right to secede and attacked them.
So no, it probably won't fly...
Unfortunately, I have to agree with the critics of Kerry who said
that he was aloof and out of touch with Middle America;
his campaign clearly didn't recognize that Bush had
succeeded at telling them that Kerry didn't share their values,
and Kerry didn't realize it and demonstrate otherwise,
nor did he do an adequate job of talking about Democratic values
in a way that would draw them in.
And the Republicans and the Democrat establishment had
pretty much gotten together to take out Howard Dean,
who was building an actual political party inside the
hollowed-out shell of the current party.


Bill Stewart  [EMAIL PROTECTED]