Lots of job~ma quester, I sorry that may happen.
Spike ,'Conversations with Dead People'
Natter 61*
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
The county I grew up in went 77+% for McCain - MORE Repub than in 2004. It is also 96% white, which - wow.
The county I live in now went 74+% for Obama - MORE Dem than in 2004. It is 55% white, which is no surprise.
My sister's birthday is on the 14th.
So's mine. Although, since she was born in '61, she is slightly younger than the president.
No, that's not President Bush's approval rating. It's the number of counties that voted more Republican than in 2004.
This has been discussed, but has this particular map (the bottom of the two) been linked to?
As DemfromCT noted over three months ago, and as MSNBC notes today, "[i]t's hard not to look at the map ... and not view the GOP as a regional party right now."
Brenda, Rahm is Jewish, and his Dad came over from Israel. The family is fascinating. Whip-smart, a little nuts (esp. The youngest brother, Ari), and two of the three boys have had fictional characters based on them.
Neat! I need to pay more attention to this stuff. Anyway, my point was really only that it's not a whitebread Amerrurican name and as such, maybe an extra kick in the pants to a certain loathsome sector of society, Which, yay.
"[i]t's hard not to look at the map ... and not view the GOP as a regional party right now."
I get the little red blip in Arizona, but where the hell in Colorado is that red blip from?
Am I mistaken, or does that big trail of red pretty much follow the Appalachians and Blue Hills?
I get the little red blip in Arizona, but where the hell in Colorado is that red blip from?
I'm guessing Colorado Springs? Lots of religious right around there. (Of which the Air Force may or may not represent a subset.)
I'm guessing Colorado Springs? Lots of religious right around there.
That's what I was thinking, but is it that far south?
That would make sense.
Now compare that map to these (from May 20): Appalachia's Last Chance to Show It Doesn't Have an Obama Problem
Maps that show were Hilary won 50%, 60% and 70% of the primary vote.