BARBELITH underground
 

Subcultural engagement for the 21st Century...
Barbelith is a new kind of community (find out more)...
You can login or register.


Is Bush going to Win?

 
  

Page: 1 ... 23456(7)8910

 
 
FinderWolf
20:22 / 25.10.04
7 Bush Cousins Launch Pro-Kerry Web Site

1 hour, 38 minutes ago
By KEN MAGUIRE, Associated Press Writer
Yahoo News

BOSTON - There goes the invitation to the Texas ranch.

Seven distant relatives of President Bush (news - web sites) have created a Web site urging visitors: "Please, don't vote for our cousin."

The Bush relatives, supporters of Democratic challenger John Kerry (news - web sites), say they've never met the president but disagree with his policies ranging from the war in Iraq (news - web sites) to the environment.

The Web site was launched in late September "to help America heal from the sickness it has suffered since George Bush (news - web sites) was appointed president in 2000."

"I don't really feel like it's a betrayal," said Sheila House, the president's second cousin and co-creator of the site. "I'll definitely admit that we're using the relationship as a hook to get people to talk about politics."

The people behind the Web site are all grandchildren of Mary Bush House, the sister of Prescott Bush, who was the father and grandfather of the two Bush presidents. That makes them second cousins of the president.

The idea came about when Kerry spotted Sheila House's cousin, Jeanny House, at a rally waving a sign that read "Bush Relative for Kerry." They shook hands and Kerry joked about creating a Web site, Sheila House said.

The site, which includes the headline, "Because blood is thinner than oil!" offers testimonials from the Bush relatives.

The Bush campaign did not return a call seeking comment.

____


A group of moderate Democrats are rolling out ads to court Hispanic voters in nine states, including a commercial targeting Puerto Ricans in Philadelphia, Cleveland, Orlando and Tampa, Fla.

The radio ad mixes a song and a discussion of tax refunds to urge listeners to vote Democratic. The commercial argues that Democrats pushed for a tax refund of up to $1,000 per child per year for Puerto Ricans, but Republicans opposed it with a voice singing, "Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye. Dear refund. I'll miss you."

The latest series of ads for The New Democrat Network's "Hispanic Project" will air on radio and TV in nine states, including Florida, New Mexico, Colorado and Nevada. The group has spent $6 million since March to increase political awareness among Hispanics and encourage them to vote Democratic.

The ads to be released over the next eight days target subgroups of Hispanics, such as Cuban-Americans in Southern Florida.

"It's not just 'Oh look, we Democrats speak Spanish,'" said Joe Garcia, an adviser to the group. "We understand more than just broad groups. There are subgroups with very specific issues before us."
 
 
FinderWolf
20:29 / 26.10.04
Yahoo says that most of the new voters who've registered for this election lean towards Kerry (we already knew that but it's nice to see it in black and white):

>> Here's what we found:

• Among those identified as likely voters, 94% were people who voted in 2000, 5% were new voters. Regular voters supported Bush by 4 percentage points. New voters supported Kerry by 19 points.

>> Likely voters who cast a ballot in 2000 lean toward Bush, 50%-46%, according to USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup surveys during the past four months. But likely voters who didn't go to the polls four years ago are overwhelmingly for Kerry, 59%-40%.
 
 
FinderWolf
18:04 / 28.10.04
Kerry Throws Bush's Own Words Back At Him

(excerpts from Yahoo News story)

Kerry said the weapons were not "where they were supposed to be, you were warned to guard them, you didn't guard them. They're not secure, and, guess what, according to George Bush (news - web sites)'s own words, he shouldn't be our commander in chief and I couldn't agree more."


With Tuesday's election deadlocked, Kerry took aim at the president's perceived strength -- national security -- and hammered him for a fourth consecutive day on the missing explosives.

Bush on Wednesday accused Kerry of opportunism, saying: "A political candidate who jumps to conclusions without knowing the facts is not a person you want as commander in chief ... that is part of a pattern of a candidate who will say anything to get elected."

Kerry threw the words back at the president 24 hours later, announcing he was going "to apply the Bush standard" and declaring: "Mr. President, I agree with you."

"George Bush jumped to conclusions about 9/11 and Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)," he said. "George Bush jumped to conclusions about weapons of mass destruction and he rushed to war without a plan for the peace. George Bush jumped to conclusions about how the Iraqi people would receive our troops. He not only jumped to conclusions, he ignored the facts he was given."

KENNEDY INVOKED

Almost drowned out by a thunderous wave of foot stomping from thousands of supporters packed into a University of Toledo arena, Kerry added: "I hope George Bush can hear that. That is the rumble of change coming at him."

Kerry recalled how President John Kennedy took the blame for the bungled Bay of Pigs operation in Cuba in 1961.

"Can you imagine President Kennedy ... standing up and telling the American people he couldn't think of a single mistake that he had made? When the Bay of Pigs went sour, John Kennedy had the courage to look America in the eye and say to America 'I take responsibility, it is my fault."'

Challenging Bush, Kerry said: "Mr. President, it is long since time for you to start taking responsibility for the mistakes that you've made."

Wearing a Red Sox cap and reveling in the team's World Series championship after an 86-year drought, Kerry saw a metaphor for his own White House bid.

"About a year ago, when things weren't going so well in my campaign, somebody called a radio talk show and they said, thinking they were just cutting me right to the quick, they said 'John Kerry won't be the president until the Red Sox win.' Well, we're on our way."
 
 
FinderWolf
19:52 / 28.10.04
for all the good it'll do.... I hope the feds can
prevent at least some of the fraud and dirty tricks...

----

Number of Federal Poll Watchers to Triple
47 minutes ago

Yahoo News

By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - More than 1,000 federal poll watchers will be sent to monitor elections in 25 states to assure compliance with voting laws and prevent discrimination or disenfranchisement, the Justice Department (news - web sites) announced Thursday.

The 1,090 federal observers and monitors will be on duty in at least 86 locations for Tuesday's election. The number is more than triple the 317 dispatched for the 2000 presidential election, which ended after a 36-day court battle over Florida's votes.

Personnel from the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division will be on hand in eight Florida counties, including Broward, Palm Beach and Dade counties where much of the 2000 election controversy took place.

Monitors and observers are also being sent to other battleground states in the contest between President Bush (news - web sites) and Sen. John Kerry (news - web sites), including Ohio, Michigan, Iowa, Minnesota, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Nevada.
 
 
Simplist
01:35 / 29.10.04
Haven't posted much here lately, and have been actively avoiding political news for the last week or so--seeing Bush seemingly on the verge of winning overwhelmingly was getting way too depressing. So imagine my surprise when I come back to civilization to find that the race is suddenly looking pretty damned winnable by my guy! Scanning the headlines and latest poll results I'm actually feeling hopeful for the first time in quite a while...
 
 
bjacques
16:43 / 29.10.04
A dark horse candidate takes it at the last minute...

 
 
Baz Auckland
12:07 / 01.11.04
Just for the record, with one day to go, The Electoral College Prediction has Kerry at 298 to Bush's 231...
 
 
FinderWolf
12:57 / 01.11.04
Kinda cool - although I don't like the predictions at the end made by Halloween mask sales or the schoolkids who have always picked a winner...

My father, who traditionally votes Republican and who is annoyed with Bush but doesn't like Kerry, said to me over the weekend that he really believes Kerry is going to win (and he said it like he wasn't that happy about it). I took that as a good omen.

And a friend of mine who dropped everything in his life to work for the Kerry campaign and has been out in Ohio for the past 3 months says he really believes Kerry will win this.

----

Kerry claims victory after Redskins' loss

Mon Nov 1, 3:34 AM ET
Yahoo News

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Senator John Kerry (news - web sites) declared victory in the US presidential election, staking his claim on a historical quirk linking past White House races and the Washington Redskins (news) football team.

The National Football League's Redskins lost 28-14 to the Green Bay Packers (news) at home on Sunday and, if tradition holds, this means President George W. Bush (news - web sites) is bound to lose the White House.

The legend surrounding the Redskins' last home game before Election Day is simplicity itself: If they win, the White House incumbent will remain president. If they lose, the incumbent loses. Going into the 2004 vote, the Redskins' electoral barometer has held true for 17 straight elections -- a record that professional pollsters can only dream of.

"I couldn't be more thrilled with the Packers win today," Kerry said in a statement titled "Packers Win -- Kerry's In!" released soon after the final whistle blew at Fedex Field outside Washington.

"This streak started with Herbert Hoover, and will continue this week when George Bush (news - web sites), the only president since Hoover to lose jobs, loses his," Kerry said. "When the Redskins get beat before the election, the incumbent loses. The Packers have done their part, this Tuesday, we'll do ours."

The polls show Bush and Kerry locked in a dead heat ahead of Tuesday's vote.

Kerry and the Packers have a bit of history already, although the candidate understandably did not bring that up on Sunday. At a campaign rally in Wisconsin, home of the Packers, Kerry clumsily referred to the team's famed stadium as "Lambert Field" instead of Lambeau Field.

Kerry may not have reminded voters of his slip but the Bush campaign did. "After today's victory, we're confident Packer fans across Wisconsin will be excited to go out and vote for the candidate who understands the 'frozen tundra of Lambeau' is not a dessert item in an expensive French restaurant," spokesman Scott Stanzel said.

Omens that can supposedly predict the outcome of US elections are legion and stretch from sports playing fields to Wall Street and fashion house catwalks.

Since 1904, according to Jeffrey Hirsch, editor of the Stock Trader's Almanac, the incumbent has failed to win re-election if the Dow Jones index falls by 0.5 per cent or more in October. This October, the Dow has fallen 0.52 per cent, pointing to a Kerry presidency.

Another piece of unconventional wisdom involves fashion styles, with liberally rising hemlines indicating election victory for the Democratic candidate and a more modest, conservative skirt-length suggesting a Republican win.

But with low-slung jeans having replaced miniskirts as the new pioneer in pushing the frontiers of flesh-baring street wear, no discernible consensus has emerged on where hemlines are right now.

Connecticut-based Weekly Reader magazine, meanwhile, believes it has located the perfect sample group for predicting the ballot outcome, even if none of its members are old enough to vote.

The magazine's hundreds of thousands of school readers, ranging from first grade through 12th grade (aged six to 17), traditionally take part in a nationwide mock vote which, since 1956, has accurately chosen the actual White House winner.

This time around, more than 60 percent opted for Bush over Kerry, who only won one state, Maryland.

One of the more fanciful indicators takes its readings from the sales of candidate Halloween masks.

In 2000, the Wisconsin-based internet costume company, www.buycostumes.com, began tracking presidential candidate mask sales by five different manufacturers and asked 12 different chains to research their sales history.

Their findings showed that since 1980, the candidate whose likeness has outsold his opponent's has won the White House.

As of this weekend, Bush masks were reportedly the more popular choice, but only by the narrowest of margins.

Back on the sports field, fans of divination are still mulling the possible electoral impact of the historic World Series (news - web sites) win last week by the Boston Red Sox (news) baseball team -- its first world championship since 1918.

Some believe it augurs a Kerry win, given that Boston is the Massachusetts senator's home team. They also point out that the Red Sox won the World Series in two other election years -- 1912 and 1916 -- and in each case the Democrat candidate came out on top.

A tongue-in-cheek counter argument insists that the Red Sox triumph was so extraordinary that the only electoral equivalent would be a victory Tuesday for independent candidate Ralph Nader (news - web sites).
 
 
ibis the being
14:11 / 01.11.04
Connecticut-based Weekly Reader magazine, meanwhile, believes it has located the perfect sample group for predicting the ballot outcome, even if none of its members are old enough to vote.

Aw, don't worry about this, FinderWolf! (They're from Connecticut, after all). In Nickelodeon's online poll, kids chose Kerry by a landslide.
 
 
FinderWolf
17:10 / 01.11.04
*whew*! Good...
 
 
Baz Auckland
18:38 / 01.11.04
Speculators Bet on Kerry Win, Oil Falls

Oil prices fell sharply on Monday on speculation that a U.S. election win for Senator John Kerry could ease the geopolitical friction that has helped fuel this year's record-breaking rally.

U.S. light crude settled down $1.63 to $50.13 after diving as low as $49.30 a barrel, breaking below $50 the first time in nearly a month. U.S. crude peaked a week ago at $55.67 a barrel.
 
 
FinderWolf
18:43 / 01.11.04
You beat me to it, Baz

That and the Ohio judge ruling against Republicans challenging of voter's certification at the polls look better and better for Kerry...

HOLY SHIT - THE DREAM IS REALITY!!! KERRY WINS!!! (just practicing)
 
 
Simplist
00:28 / 02.11.04
There's a feeling of great optomism afoot; everyone I talk to seems to expect Kerry to win. Then again, I am in San Francisco.

But we'll (probably) know for sure within 24 hours. The exit polls will be leaked on the web by 2:00pm PST, if previous years are any indication. Hard to believe the election is finally here.
 
 
Pingle!Pop
09:48 / 02.11.04
Incidentally, is there anyone over there planning to vote Nader or, well, anyone except Kerry today who'd prefer a hand in British politics where at least there's a third party with some chance of making some ground? I'll happily swap my vote in any election you like over here for a Kerry vote over there.
 
 
FinderWolf
10:13 / 02.11.04
I was the 2nd person to vote in my neighborhood in Brooklyn at 6:10 AM today. The optimism and excitement among the voters (pretty much all Kerry supporters since it's Greenpoint right next to Williamsburg in Brooklyn, NY, aside from some stodgy conservative old people, perhaps) was palable.

I'm already envisioning Bush's concession speech.

(Trying to conceal his frustrated smirk with a fake smile):
The people have spoken. And that's what's so special about freedom. I congratulate John Kerry and wish him well. God bless America.

JOHN FORBES KERRY IS THE 44th PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA!!!!!
 
 
FinderWolf
11:03 / 02.11.04
from CNN.com:

>> Voters lined up before dawn in Roswell, Georgia.

>> Voters have started casting ballots this Election Day 2004. In New Hampshire, two hamlets voted shortly after midnight. Polls are opening in other states across the country, with reports that some voters camped out overnight to be near the front of the line.
 
 
Jack Fear
11:38 / 02.11.04
Couldn't sleep. Lay awake from 2 AM onwards, counting the hours 'til the polls opened.

I'd promised my eight-year-old daughter I'd take her to the polling place with me. Last night I made her go to bed early: "Remember," I said, "I'm going to be waking you at 5:30 AM."

At five sharp she appeared at our bedroom doorway. She hadn't been able to sleep, either.

Our precinct polling place is the fire station right next to our apartment complex, so we walked over. Six oh five: cold, still dark. Our shadows, cast before us by the streetlights, looked miles long. Creeping through the woods with no one around, it felt like we were on a secret mission of grave importance. Which we were, aside from the "secret" part.

The polling place is about the size of my dining room: two ancient ladies behind a card table with the big book--434 registered voters in our precinct. I was #12 for the day. Fellow in front of me: executive buzzcut and pinstripes. Fellow in front of him an aging hippie in denim, grey mullet and a dream-catcher earring. We're all in this together.

This is how it happens. What constitutes "direct action"?Throngs of people in park, shouting slogans? garbage-cans thrown through shop windows? tanks in the streets? or this: sleepy folks grumbling good-naturedly about the hour, the drizzling rain, the bad coffee.

A patient old woman, her remaining hair dyed an unnatural shade of orange, looks up the name in the big book: step into the booth, momentarily confused (this is my first election in the Flower City, and thus my first experience with an old-fashioned voting machine): orient, find the candidates, flip the switches.

Smile and nod at my little girl, who wraps both hands around the big red lever and tugs hard--changing the world with all her might.
 
 
electric monk
11:52 / 02.11.04
O Jack Fear, you've warmed my heart.

KERRY IN A LANDSLIDE!!!
 
 
Keith, like a scientist
11:58 / 02.11.04
I was #30 at my polling center this morning, and I was there 5 minutes after it opened! So, it seems that a lot of people are trying to vote early. Stood in the rain for a little bit, but that didn't discourage anyone.

My first experience with the punch cards...I was really nervous about doing this, cause it seems really dicey, but when I pulled my card out, all the "chads" were cleanly punched and it looked pristine...I just don't like how you can't verify on the punch card itself who you voted for...oh well.

I also went to the Kerry rally last night in Cleveland. Rode the subway into downtown and made my way down to the event. Saw Kucinich, John Glenn, etc. all give their props, leading up to Kerry's bandleader, The Boss, Bruce Springsteen. It was pretty cool. Bruce was heartfelt, well-spoken, and sounded beautiful with only harmonica and acoustic guitar as accompaniment.

Kerry's speech was pretty much the same one he has been giving, but it sounded good, and the crowd was impressive. 50,000-60,000 reported attendees.
 
 
sleazenation
12:17 / 02.11.04
It surprizes me as a casual observer that A) there isn't a way to veryfy hole-punched ballot actually reflects your voting preference, B) punch card voting machines are used at all - what's wrong with using a pen or pencil provided in the ballot booth to cross the box of your chosen candidate?
 
 
Jack Fear
12:33 / 02.11.04
Pencil, being erasable, is an invitation to massive (if labor-intense) fraud--but yeah, the precinct in my old hometown used a card-reader system rather like those used in standardized tests in school, where you blacken the circle next to your choice. You use a special pen, I think--magnetic ink or summat--but I could be wrong.
 
 
STOATIE LIEKS CHOCOLATE MILK
12:42 / 02.11.04
O Jack Fear, you've warmed my heart.

For such an old curmudgeon, he does that alarmingly often.


Good luck, kids, is all I can say.
 
 
Yotsuba & Benjamin!
12:45 / 02.11.04
Just voted this morning. A provisional ballot like on TeeVee! I actually get to vote in the Elementary School I went to as a kid. The cafeteria still smells the same, remarkably. I happened to run into my Aunt, Uncle, and a kid I went to school with and hadn't seen for like ten years. And I live on Long Island.

There were no crowds, but my sister, who lives in Manhattan, said that there were lines around the block at her local polling place and she'd have to go after work.

Turnout, turnout, turnout. If "Marshall's Kids" don't show up today, then anyone under 30 will be rendered politically moot until everyone over 50 dies of natural causes. That's personally why I feel this election is so important. Not because Kerry will completely revolutionize American policy, but because if the youth vote lets down a candidate again they will be ignored for the next twenty years. And most likely beyond that.

Fingers crossed.
 
 
sleazenation
12:55 / 02.11.04
How comes you ended up with a provisional ballot Benjamin Birdie?
 
 
FinderWolf
13:07 / 02.11.04
Michael Moore's usual sporadic letter to the world:
---------------------------------------------------------
11/1/04

Friends,

This is it. ONE DAY LEFT. There are many things I’d like to say. I’ve been on the road getting out the vote for 51 straight days so I haven’t had much time to write. So I’ve put together a bunch of notes to various groups all in this one letter. Please feel free to copy and send whatever portions are appropriate to your friends and family as you spend these last 24 hours trying to convince whomever you can to show up and vote for John Kerry.

Here are my final words…

To Decent Conservatives and Recovering Republicans:

In your heart of hearts you know Bush is a miserable failure. From having no plan on what to do in Iraq once he conquered Baghdad to the 380 missing tons of explosives that could be used to kill our brave young men and women, this guy doesn’t have a clue how to fight and win a war. You should see the mail I’ve been getting lately from our troops over there. They know how much the Iraqi people hate them. They are sitting ducks anytime they go out on the road. Many believe we are not that far away from a Tet-style offensive inside the Green Zone with hundreds of Americans and Brits killed.

Bush refused to go after and capture Osama bin Laden. He fought, every step of the way, the investigation into the 9/11 attacks. Who on earth would oppose such a thing? If 3,000 people died at your place of work and your boss said we don’t need to find out why or how it happened, he’d be thrown out on his ear. Bush’s behavior after this great tragedy alone is reason enough for his removal.

You already know that George W. Bush is the farthest thing from a conservative. He’s a reckless spender who has run up record-breaking deficits and the biggest debt in our history. He believes in having the government pry into everything from your library records to your bedroom. He has hit you with hidden taxes with his tax cuts for the rich.

I know many of you don’t like Bush, but are unsure of Kerry. Give the new guy a chance. He won’t raise your taxes (unless you are super-rich), he won’t take your hunting gun away, and he won’t make you visit France. He risked his life for you many years ago. He’s asking for the chance to do it again. Scott McConnell at The American Conservative magazine has endorsed him. What more do you need?

To My Friends on the Left:

Okay, Kerry isn’t everything you wished he would be. You’re right. He’s not you! Or me. But we’re not on the ballot – Kerry is. Yes, Kerry was wrong to vote for authorization for war in Iraq but he was in step with 70% of the American public who was being lied to by Bush & Co. And once everyone learned the truth, the majority turned against the war. Kerry has had only one position on the war – he believed his president.

President Kerry had better bring the troops home right away. My prediction: Kerry’s roots are anti-war. He has seen the horrors of war and because of that he will avoid war unless it is absolutely necessary. Ask most vets. But don’t ask someone whose only horror was when he arrived too late for a kegger in Alabama.

There’s a reason Bush calls Kerry the Number One Liberal in the Senate – THAT’S BECAUSE HE IS THE NUMBER ONE LIBERAL IN THE SENATE! What more do you want? My friends, this is about as good as it gets when voting for the Democrat. We don’t have the #29 Liberal running or the #14 Liberal or even the #2 Liberal – we got #1! When has that ever happened?

Those of us who may be to the left of the #1 liberal Democrat should remember that this year conservative Democrats have had to make a far greater shift in their position to back Kerry than we have. We’re the ones always being asked to make the huge compromises and to always vote holding our noses. No nose holding this time. This #1 liberal is not the tweedledee to Bush’s tweedledum.

To Nader Voters:

See the above note.

Ralph’s own party, the Green Party, would not endorse his run this year. That’s because those of us who want to build a third party in this country know that the only way to do this is to build bridges with those who believe in the issues Nader believes in. But not one of those people will sacrifice the chance to remove George W. Bush from the White House on Tuesday. The choice here is clear: do we join with our friends, or do we piss on them?

After the debacle of 2000, the Democrats got smart and abandoned the conservative wing of their party. That’s why 8 of the 9 Democrats in the primaries this year were from the liberal wing. Ralph should take credit for that and declare victory. It’s so sad that he doesn’t realize the good he’s accomplished. But for reasons only known to him, he’s more angry at the Democrats than he is at Bush. He has lost his compass. I worry he has lost his mind. But he still gives a great speech!

And Lila Lipscomb, the mother from Flint who lost her son in Iraq, she still grieves -- as do the mothers of 1,120 others (not to mention the mothers of the 100,000 Iraqis who have died because of Bush’s war). That’s what this election is about. Not Ralph proving some point. Almost none of us on his 2000 advisory group are supporting him this year. His total lack of respect for his best friends should tell all of you something about what he really thinks of you, too.

To the Non-Swing States:

Stop listening to how your vote doesn’t count in this election and that your state is already decided for Kerry or Bush. It is critical that you vote because we not only need to give Kerry the electoral win, but he needs to have a HUGE mandate with an ENORMOUS popular vote victory as well. It will be impossible for him to get anything done for four years if there is no clear mandate. We must not only defeat Bush, we must put a stake in the heart of the right-wing, neo-con movement.

If you live in New York, California, Illinois, Texas, the Northeast or the Deep South, you need to vote and you need to bring ten people with you to the polls. If you live in a state where we have the chance to elect the Democrat to the Senate or the House, you need to vote. Turn off the TV. Quit listening to news media that has a vested interest in repeating to you over and over that your vote does not count. It does.

If you have friends or relatives who live in the 30-plus non-swing states, call them and remind them how important it is that Kerry gets a massive popular vote victory.

To Non-Voters:

I understand why you stopped voting. Politicians suck. Nothing ever seems to change. You’re only one vote.
Yes, politicians suck. But so do car salesmen – and that hasn’t stopped you from buying a car. Politicians only respond to the threat of the angry mob also known as the voting public. If most people don’t vote, that’s good news for them ‘cause then they don’t have to answer to the majority.

Almost fifty percent of Americans don’t vote. That means you belong to the largest political party in America – the Non-Voting Party. That means you hold all the power to toss George W. Bush out of the Oval Office. How cool is that?

I believe that we are going to have the largest election turnout in our lifetime tomorrow. You don’t want to miss out on that. The lines at the polls are going to be long and raucous and fun. It is an historic election. You won’t want to say that you were the only one who wasn’t there. Promise me you’ll vote, just this one time.

To All First-Time Voters:

Welcome to the longest running, uninterrupted democracy on earth! You own it. It’s yours.

A few words about how messy it’s going to be tomorrow. The lines are going to be long. Bring your iPods. Better yet, bring a friend or two. The election officials have no clue just how many millions are going to show up at the polls. This will be the largest turnout in our lifetime. They don’t have enough machines. They are going to have to send for more ballots.

And they are going to make it difficult for you to vote. The new law says if this is your first time voting you must bring ID with you that matches the address you are registered at.

If for some reason they can’t find your name on the voting rolls, you have the right to ask for a provisional ballot, which you can fill out and then sort things out later.
If you have any problems at the polling place, please call 1-866-OUR-VOTE. The people there can tell you how to find the precinct where you should be voting, get you legal help if you are denied the right to vote, or answer any other questions you may have.

If you need any help figuring out the ballot, don’t be afraid to ask. If you screw up your ballot, you can ask for another one. In fact, the law allows you to screw up your ballot two times before you finally have to submit your final ballot! Be careful to vote on the line that says John F. Kerry/John Edwards. Don’t vote for more than one Presidential, Senate or House candidate or you ballot won’t be counted. If your polling place has a stub or a receipt from your ballot, make sure they give you one.
Thanks for joining us. Democracy is not a spectator sport. It only works when we all come off the bench and participate.

To African Americans:

First of all, let’s just acknowledge what you already know: America is a country which still has a race problem, to put it nicely. Al Gore would be president today had thousands of African Americans not had their right to vote stolen from them in Florida in 2000.

Here is my commitment: I will do everything I can to make sure that this will not happen again. And I’m not the only one making this pledge. Thousands of volunteer lawyers are flying to Florida to act as poll watchers and intervene should there be any attempts to deny anyone their right to vote. They will NOT be messing around.

For my part, I have organized an army of 1,200 professional and amateur filmmakers who will be armed with video cameras throughout the states of Florida and Ohio. At the first sign of criminality, we will dispatch a camera crew to where the vote fraud is taking place and record what is going on. We will put a big public spotlight on any wrongdoing by Republican officials in those two states. They will not get away with this as they did in 2000.

In Ohio, the Republicans are sending almost 2,000 paid “poll challengers” into the black precincts of Cleveland in an attempt to stop African Americans from voting. This action is beyond despicable. Do not let this stop you from voting. I, and thousand of others, will be there to fight for you and protect you.

To George W.:

I know it’s gotta be rough for you right now. Hey, we’ve all been there. “You’re fired” are two horrible words when put together in that order. Bin Laden surfacing this weekend to remind the American people of your total and complete failure to capture him was a cruel trick or treat. But there he was. 3,000 people were killed and he’s laughing in your face. Why did you stop our Special Forces from going after him? Why did you forget about bin Laden on the DAY AFTER 9/11 and tell your terrorism czar to concentrate on Iraq instead?

There he was, OBL, all tan and rested and on videotape (hey, did you get the feeling that he had a bootleg of my movie? Are there DVD players in those caves in Afghanistan?)

Speaking of my movie – can I ask you a personal question before we part ways for good on Tuesday? Why did you and your friends fund SIX “documentaries” trashing me -- but only ONE film against Kerry? C’mon, he was the candidate, not me. What a waste of your time and resources! Sure, I know what your pollsters told you, that the film had convinced some people to vote you out. I just want you to know that that was not my original intent. Funny things happen at the movies. Hope you get to see a few at the multiplex in Waco. It’s a great way to relax.

To John Kerry:

Thank you.

And don’t worry – none of us are going away after you are inaugurated. We’ll be there to hold your hand and keep you honest. Don’t let us down. We’re betting you won’t. So is the rest of the world.

That’s it. See you at the polls – and at the victory party tomorrow night.

Yours,
Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
MMFlint@aol.com
 
 
Yotsuba & Benjamin!
13:23 / 02.11.04
I was actually dubbed an inactive voter, as I hadn't voted since the 2000 election was at some point in the last four years taken off the official rolls. I need to get off my ass and re-register though, as I voted in the precinct I voted in growing up and have moved twice since 2000. Luckily, I moved back to the isle so I don't have to go too far. So, you know, I'm not sure if was actually a "provisional ballot". Something with an "A" was on the envelope. Not absentee, something else. I can't remember. It didn't say "Provisional" but it seemed like that was the general idea. I had to fill out my address and Drivers License ID number and all that.

Today I celebrate my 10 year voting anniversary. Team America, FUCK YEAH!
 
 
FinderWolf
13:28 / 02.11.04
Who are "Marshall's kids"? I don't get this reference.

>> It surprizes me as a casual observer that A) there isn't a way to veryfy hole-punched ballot actually reflects your voting preference, B) punch card voting machines are used at all - what's wrong with using a pen or pencil provided in the ballot booth to cross the box of your chosen candidate?

The place where I've voted for 8 years in Brooklyn has a big machine thing where you pull the red lever and flick the switches to mark your votes. When you pull the red lever back, you hear a big KA-CHUNK! noise and you leave. I wonder why all the people with chad/punch-card problems don't use these machines? I've never had to punch a chad in my life.
 
 
Jack Fear
13:34 / 02.11.04
Who are "Marshall's kids"? I don't get this reference.

Marshall = Marshall Mathers, a.k.a Eminem. "Marshall's kids" = Young people, first-time voters registered by Rock The Vote, Choose Or Lose, and other voter-registration programs with pop-culture links, and newly-politicized via exposure to pop media with political content (e.e.g, Eminem's song and video "Mosh").
 
 
Yotsuba & Benjamin!
13:52 / 02.11.04
Yeah, that's what I was referring to. No signs of black hoodies in midtown Manhattan as of yet, though. I might also be casting my vote this afternoon against incumbent John Wells and for native son Aaron Sorkin when I pick up The West Wing Season 3 DVD and continue to not watch new episodes on Wednesday.

Every vote counts, people!
 
 
Yotsuba & Benjamin!
14:12 / 02.11.04
Florida Report:

My Moms just voted in Palm Beach County, proverbial eye of the storm. She confirmed Challengers from both sides at the polling place but didn't see any actual challenges. She only had to wait about a half hour, but she lives in Boynton Beach, a smaller district. She also noted a slew of lawyers for both sides. I personally feel that the presence of the lawyers, combined with the equal number of challengers, combined with an almost universal knowledge of voter disenfranchisement among most voters (ESPECIALLY in Florida) combined with scores of Democratic volunteers in most counties will make any Republican attempts at chicanery obsolete.

Here's hoping.
 
 
FinderWolf
14:38 / 02.11.04
I agree - I think the legions of lawyers, news teams, etc. watching for foul play will render the Republican's efforts mostly harmless. They won't be able to muck up enough voters, percentage-wise, to create any really substantial, dramatic problems the vote this year.
 
 
Jack Fear
15:20 / 02.11.04
Oh, there may be less problems at the polls themselves--but the Republican strategy is centered around voter suppression--keeping foks away from the polls entirely, either by stripping them from the voter rolls or to make 'em to shit-scared to show up even if they are registered--sending phony letters saying that if you registered through an NAACP voter drive that your registration is invalid, and if you try to vote you could face a ten-year prison term... or that you could face felony charges if you try to vote and are behind on child support payments, or have unpaid parking tickets...

These letters have been circulating in Philly and Cleveland lately. You and I know they're false, because we've got 'net access and a pretty good understanding of thje elctoral process. But if you're a poor urban voter living in the fucking Projects--particularly ifyou're a first-time voter--how are you going to know? Who are you going to ask? How in God's name can this damage be undone?
 
 
diz
15:37 / 02.11.04
How in God's name can this damage be undone?

sadly, i'm not sure it can at this date, and it's going to take a lot to do it afterwards. not only does it prey on people's ignorance (which is fostered by the very system which the Republicans are trying to control), it's largely invisible. it sits right in a huge blind spot of the electoral process: we know that a huge number of potential voters don't show up, but it's nearly impossible to know why each individual potential voter stayed home. that's why it's so effective.

i'm really afraid that the very observers might themselves inadvertently assist the Republicans here. by focusing so much attention on making sure that people who want to vote can, and ultimately by certifying that there was no foul play on that end, it makes it more difficult to get people to pay attention to people who didn't want to vote out of intimidation, and gives them credibility of the "hey, even with all your observers, you didn't see any foul play" variety.

sigh. here's hoping it all works out this time, at least.
 
 
grant
15:40 / 02.11.04
They've been circulating in North Florida too.

Boynton's the next town south of the town I grew up in -- if you ever visit, lemme know.

I voted. Long line -- over an hour -- and the touchscreens are not as sensitive as I'd like. Tried writing in a candidate against an unopposed state rep, and the "S" and "I" wouldn't work.

I brought Sophia. She had a blast, playing with people's hair, flirting with the couple behind us in line. She's almost two. This is her first election. She likes the process.

I didn't see anything weird going on, other than the machines being harder to work with than the old cards (which never lined up correctly in the sleeve anyway, as the world learned four years ago).

Sleaze: what's wrong with using a pen or pencil provided in the ballot booth to cross the box of your chosen candidate?

Time, I think. The punch card machines I *think* predate the scantron system Jack Fear describes, but allow for automatic vote counting -- much quicker than checking the checkmarks individually. They're cheaper than the kind with the lever, too.

Actually, they might not only predate the scantron, but may once have been touted as being more accurate. Not sure about that.

Anyway, it's all computers now.
 
 
We're The Great Old Ones Now
16:08 / 02.11.04
And fortunately, computers don't make mistakes.

Oh.
 
  

Page: 1 ... 23456(7)8910

 
  
Add Your Reply