Also, $6 billion for the election. $8billion spent on Halloween this year. It's all perspective.
what do they count as halloween $$ I wonder, my $4 on poster board I bet wasn't counted. That makes it just worse.
Andrew ,'Damage'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Also, $6 billion for the election. $8billion spent on Halloween this year. It's all perspective.
what do they count as halloween $$ I wonder, my $4 on poster board I bet wasn't counted. That makes it just worse.
Kos:
With Chris Murphy winning in Connecticut, remember this -- Joe Lieberman is officially history. We retired him.
Yay!
I am pretty sure poster board did not count. It is all of those damned dog costumes.
Keep an eye on New Hampshire. The pre-election polling told a clear story - Obama by a small but stable, and statistically significant, margin. The only real question is whether the polling will be a good predictor (which it generally is). New Hampshire should be about the first swing state to report full results. If they match the polling (about 3% pro-O), things look very nice for Obama nationwide.
It is all of those damned dog costumes.
OK, I followed Pix's lead, but this just cracked me up.
Some results maps that I am following:
Google: [link]
Huffington Post: [link]
New York Times: [link]
Heh. From The Guardian's liveblog:
They will be dancing on the streets of [insert name of Connecticut's state capital] tonight.
Update: Hartford. Stop emailing.
I think I'm going to step away from the computer for a while, watch The Avengers for the fifth time, and have myself a locavore Tom Collins.
I have too many tabs open. I need my work computer and its four screens.
Dammit, I can't get ElectoralVote.com to load. Anyone have a good site to follow updates?
I'm doing Pollster [link] and CNN [link] Pollster has some nifty click-throughs for the states, showing how the counties are going (and when they each get called). They also have a quick 'n' easy chart to eyeball how the counties are swinging compared to '08. Ohio, for instance: [link]