Yes, it does. And for the first time in this campaign, I'm sorry that I voted for her in the primary.
This, exactly. I've been more and more disappointed with the tone of her campaign over the last two months, but this is the capper.
ETA: ita, I love the map! Thanks!
I'm really hoping she'll drop out. It's over, the only way to win is to take it to the convention and somehow get a bunch of superdelegates to go her way. It's not going to happen, and if it did, it would be devastating to the democrats. OTOH, maybe that's the way it will go down, the democrats are awfully good at shooting themselves in the foot.
Did any of you hear NPR's story about the biological superiority of early motherhood and the nascence of stay-at-home moms? For obvious reasons it touched a nerve with me.
But then I read this Science Daily article on successful men marrying women with educations and work experiences that are similar to their own mothers and I felt oddly better.
The researchers discovered that 72 percent of mothers of high-achieving men worked outside the home after they had children. Among those men, three-quarters agreed or strongly agreed with the statement "Men are more attracted to women who are successful in their careers." Men who grew up with working moms were almost twice as likely to marry a woman who makes $50,000 or more per year.
Seriously. I have enough guilt in my life. I don't need NPR to add more.
OTOH, maybe that's the way it will go down, the democrats are awfully good at shooting themselves in the foot.
I'm pretty sure that's the way it will go down. I don't think she'll drop out. Though I wish she would.
This, exactly. I've been more and more disappointed with the tone of her campaign over the last two months, but this is the capper.
Tep and Kristin are me. Although I still worry about
1) what the Republican slime machine will throw at Obama
and
2) that Obama's "hope" is the new "compassionate conservatism"
My 3pm interview just called to say she thinks she'll be about 5 minutes late. Good that she called, or bad that she's late?
I'm no fan of George Will, but he delivers the kind of cutting snark I normally expect from Stephen Colbert here: [link]
Favorite quote:
Or perhaps she wins if Obama's popular vote total is, well, adjusted, by counting each African-American vote as only three-fifths of a vote. There is precedent, of sorts, for that arithmetic (see the Constitution, Article I, Section 2, before the 14th Amendment).
From a ways back, because I'm catching up:
It is that rarity, a phenomenon with the potential to capture a wider audience, offering a genteel and disciplined alternative to both the slack look of hip-hop and the menacing spirit of goth.
Jilli is "menacing"?
I've been told I can be, and that it's very disturbing because no one expects menacing from a cupcake goth.
I'm tickled by the NYT article on Steampunk, because they quoted a friend of mine. Now if I could just get it through all the Steampunkers' heads that no, really kids, you don't need to
invent a persona or character
to dress up in wacky clothes. Just wear the damn outfits!
2) Obama's "hope" is the new "compassionate conservatism"
I don't think so. I was here when Bush was Gov. and could've told y'all the hard candy outside, squishy inside was crap.
What's her reason for being late? As long as it's not stupid, I say it's good that she called. Shit happens.