hur hurTDG said:I'm not feeling well, so I'm just not going to vote, Obama has this locked up.
hur hurTDG said:I'm not feeling well, so I'm just not going to vote, Obama has this locked up.
I don't think they'll get a supermajority. Maybe if you include Lieberman. Honestly though, the average Democratic congressman is a lot more moderate than he or she was decades ago. If the left acquires and maintains a supermajority, then there may be movement back towards extreme leftism, of course.Sysgen said:When the republicans controlled both houses and the executive branch at least the democrats could filibuster. This will be unabated. Just for note I'm an independent and am speaking not for one party just the concept of giving congressional and executive control to one party and an extreme wing at that, whether dem left or republic right. It's not good for America.
In his Fox interview, Schumer, who heads the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, also weighed in on the election, predicting that Democrats will end up with between 56 and 58 seats in the Senate.
Sysgen said:When the republicans controlled both houses and the executive branch at least the democrats could filibuster. This will be unabated. Just for note I'm an independent and am speaking not for one party just the concept of giving congressional and executive control to one party and an extreme wing at that, whether dem left or republic right. It's not good for America.
Sysgen said:How do people think this way? I've heard it numerous times and it makes no sense. The whole point of our system is checks and balances. The Republicans may lose their ability to even filibuster. How is this good unless your a left wing democrat?
The GOP was fairly close on taking filibuster off the table, in fact, they used this threat to prevent filibusters.Sysgen said:When the republicans controlled both houses and the executive branch at least the democrats could filibuster. This will be unabated. Just for note I'm an independent and am speaking not for one party just the concept of giving congressional and executive control to one party and an extreme wing at that, whether dem left or republic right. It's not good for America.
TDG said:I'm not feeling well, so I'm just not going to vote, Obama has this locked up.
That mentality scares me more than any of the voter suppression tactics going on.TDG said:I'm not feeling well, so I'm just not going to vote, Obama has this locked up.
Danthrax said:We don't have enough money to run proper elections. Maybe if all our jobs hadn't been outsourced to CHINA
TheKingsCrown said:I would love to see your state turn. But something tells me that Ohio, not Florida, will go dem this year.
I think the "McCain has lost already, so what does it matter if I went voting for him" mentality evens things out.Jonm1010 said:That mentality scares me more than any of the voter suppression tactics going on.
Don't scare me like that.TDG said:I'm just riling you guys up, of course I'm voting. I'm leaving right after I eat lunch.
Holy fuck I'm nervous. I'm not turning on the TV until the polls begin closing, I'm so nervous.
Nameless said:![]()
Polls open at 9pm. They are equipped to handle either party. I have a ride lined up for later just in case.
Jonm1010 said:That mentality scares me more than any of the voter suppression tactics going on.
I live over at the end of the Panhandle, in West Bumfuck. We have about as many Obama signs as McCain signs, which is strange and unprecedented for a solid Republican area.bengraven said:I live in North Bumfuck Florida and until this morning there was nothing but McCain signs in every yard. Probably because of the fear of people stealing signs, which has been very real.
This morning the entire trip from Keystone Heights to Gainesville, every single house had an Obama sign in front of it, it seemed. I was very happy.
artredis1980 said:Some more stories, though keep in mind that the enthusiasm gap, and the blog reader gap, mean that these are coming primarily from Obama supporters, primarily from Obama counties, and that everyone is influenced by the expectation of an Obama win.
Alexandria:
I live in bluest part of Blue NoVA, Alexandria City. In 2004, my polling place went 80-20 for Kerry. 2,886 votes were cast in that election. I got in a long line in the dark this morning at 5:55am, I was voter number 2,531.
Colorado:
I voted early here in Colorado, which was a fairy uneventful experience. But my canvassing for Obama did turn up some interested scenes -- the highlight being the ACORN workers who were all living in a home together and were absolutely floored that I was VOLUNTEERING for Obama and not getting paid! To quote the one Marlboro red smoking, heavily tattooed lady "I love Obama, but I'm not doing shit without some money!" By the end of our conversation, all I could think was 'Thank god these women never found their way in front of a television camera.'
Lubbock:
I voted this morning in Lubbock, Texas, a town that was disappointed to be named only the second most conservative city in America. I thought there would be lines -- for the primary, there was a long line and a long wait. But this morning, there was no line at all, no wait at all, only one of 15 voting machines was in use. We are using a "super precinct" for voting this time -- instead of voting at a specific assigned voting place, voters can go to any of a large number of locations in town. My four-year-old daughter and I voted at an elementary school in our neighborhood. I can't decide if the apparently low turnout is because with a 70/30 Rep/Dem split, there's no point in anyone voting here, or because the Republicans are depressed.
Harlem:
I'm a 37 year old African American woman. I grew up in Harlem and have lived here most of my life. In the 20 years I've been voting at the same polling place, I've never had to stand in line. Usually there were more election workers than voters. Today is the day that changed. There were about 100 people waiting in line. Most of them were young, old and even older African Americans.
I overheard a conversation one woman was having with a mother pushing her son in a stroller. The mother mentioned she told her son she would be voting for the first black president. His response was, "I want to be a black president too!" The other woman and I laughed. It was not a laugh that ridiculed or dismissed the moment, but a laugh of amazement and delight of the infinite possibilities Barack Obama's candidacy represents to the young people in the African American community.
Northern New Jersey:
My father, a lifelong Republican, voted for his first Democrat for president this morning. He falls under the category of "racists for Obama" his first act after voting was to call me in his worst stereotypical black voice and ask "I voted for Obama, now where do I pick up my free bucket of chicken?" Strange guy. Anyway, his reason for voting Obama was simple -- how much worse can he be than the guys I've been voting for all these years? It shocked me he voted Obama as he'd normally fall under the "McCain is good for Israel so I'm voting for McCain" crowd.
Chester County, PA:
It's very passionate here. Many of the residents are former Delawarians and tend to run more Democratic. But the majority of residents are life long locals, and they are very Republican. It was the first time I had fun going to the polling place. We vote in a church...and normally, the mood is quite reserved. This morning you could spot the Obama voters - we were laughing and chatting and smiling. Still, it did seem that the majority of early AM voters were voting McCain - or maybe Republicans unhappily voting for Obama? Who knows - but the difference in their mood was obvious. Grim, quiet, lots of hostile looks shot at the happy Obama voters. It is so obviously polarized here! The turnout was about 3-4X normal according to one of the poll workers, but certainly not overwhelming just yet.
Sysgen said:The democrats had nothing to do with the recent financial fallout. Whatever. Giving *COMPLETE* control like this to *ANY* party is asking for it. Be careful what you wish for.
They should be marginalized until they can reform their platform to be about true conservatism and not religious nuttery.
Count Dookkake said:No matter who wins, it will be great to see the tears of the loser's supoorters.
Opportunities for great LOLs IRL for the next few weeks or so.
Can't wait.
On her food?Grug said:Oh man, on Fox they just asked some chick in a diner why she voted for Obama and she choked up bad. :lol
Awkwardness in the extreme.
Thank you. I hope my uncle does the same, he lives in PA and his voting for Nader again would beBigGreenMat said:I largely voted 3rd Party (Green Party, which has a very strong Chicago presence) and was very close to voting for Bob Barr as my vote will make no impact (I live in Chicago, which is a HUGE Obama stronghold), but I broke down and voted Obama as I believe it is symbolically right at this time. As much as I might disagree with Obama about a great many things I think he is what the country needs right now.
Obama +1
bob_arctor said:Why, hello there, obvious point.
Zeliard said:If Obama doesn't win, it will be because of complacency on the part of Obama supporters.
Q: once the president is called, will the thread title change, or will there be a new thread to talk/celebrate/cry about it?
i think it will be renamed since thats what we did throughout the primaries anyway.Souldriver said:Q: once the president is called, will the thread title change, or will there be a new thread to talk/celebrate/cry about it?
Sysgen said:and an extreme wing at that, whether dem left or republic right.
Yes... and lets hope Matt Groening wasn't being a little bit psychic with that one.perfectchaos007 said:You know that in the cartoon the suicide booth said "serving since 2008""
bob_arctor said:Can you give me recent examples the horror extracted on this country by "one party rule"? I already know of the 1st years of Bush so you can leave that out.
Sysgen said:Future my freind and I don't need a crystal ball. I don't need to spell it out. The social spending is going to be over the top. I'm also worried about lessening the soveignty of our country. Horror indeed.
Why would you want that? There are a lot of people who have valid reasons to disagree with Democratic ideas. If they're voting Democratic this go-around, it's only because Bush betrayed most every ideal that the party was founded on.GoutPatrol said:NO. Keep them as the religious nutty party. It will lead to their slow, slow death and lead to longer Democratic control.
She's never been a die-hard republican (I think she voted for Bill Clinton even). I like to think maybe I had some influence, but it was probably more of a feeling of disenfranchisement that the GOP has managed to portray on many of it's older supporters.Souldriver said:Congrats to your mother. Any idea why and when she shifted?
Sorry, only those of voting age can stake their claim in NC!Dax01 said:We're going to go over this again. NC is going blue because it's DAX'S state. Not yours.
Sysgen said:Future my freind and I don't need a crystal ball. I don't need to spell it out. The social spending is going to be over the top. I'm also worried about lessening the soveignty of our country. Horror indeed.
Sharp said:Why would you want that? There are a lot of people who have valid reasons to disagree with Democratic ideas. If they're voting Democratic this go-around, it's only because Bush betrayed most every ideal that the party was founded on.
Husker86 said:Oh, you're one of those
lawblob said:What specifically do you mean by this?