Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet
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.
Yikes! I need to get off my ass and find a pink or burgundy knee length crinoline. Any suggestions for sources that don't charge an arm and a leg for non-white underskirts? And are smooth and comfy to the legs?
You want the Malco Modes #582 "soft chiffon" petticoat. One on eBay in burgundy: [link]
Or there's Amazon, which has it in pink: [link]
I don't think there is any argument against abortion rights that is not, at its root, anti-woman. So in that sense, I am a single issue voter because that single issue illuminates so many others.
So I was talking to my little brother on the way home, and he told me the most amazing story.
He was in line to vote on Tuesday, and the woman behind him asked what to do. He said, "Well, pretty much like last time, they didn't change anything." And she said that she'd never voted before and didn't know what to do.
White woman, mid-50s.
So he tells her to go check if she's registered (she didn't even know if she was), and she was. Then she looks at the ballot, doesn't know what to do, he tells her to draw a line in the arrow for who she picks to vote for. Then he asks, "So who you going to vote for? Romney or Obama?"
She says, "Who are they?"
t facepalm
My little brother: he found a unicorn! An honest-to-god low-information voter, in (of all places) San Jose. I can't believe it.
How in the world did she know to turn up at the poll if she hadn't watched TV, read a newspaper, or talked to anyone in the past year?
I am way more anti-abortion than I have ever been given my experience but also way more pro-choice.
I think that's where I am, too, and I have never heard anyone else say it. Obviously our personal histories are different, but what you said exactly. And the pro-choice side is always going to get my vote anyway.
I wonder why she decided to vote this time. Must have been a proposition or local measure, huh?
My parents worked at a polling station like they usually do, and the remarkable thing this time was that there was only one incident with a belligerent person (usually there are several). Lots of people who needed provisional ballots for one reason or another, or were at the wrong place, one woman who was not, in turned out, registered to vote, but they were all good-humored about it. The one "problem" person was mad because they had posted the precinct numbers on the wall behind the tables where you check in, instead of taping them to the front of the table. She apparently harangued them for a while about it. That's not how they do things there.
I support any candidate who is for the free coinage of silver and bimetalism.
We have some of those in Utah, and a few of them try to pay their bills in gold. Oddly enough, most retailers refuse to make change.
One of my students asked whether I was anti-abortion or pro-choice and I actually snapped and said, "Every person I know is anti-abortion. No one thinks, 'Abortions are awesome! One for everyone!'" Then I went on to say that abortion is probably the most horrible choice any person can make, but it is their choice to make it. I think it probably offended the kid and shut her up. I've never liked the dichotomy that the right has set up.
Please to explain to me why 80% of my waking life is folding laundry? It's my big friday event. I put the kids to bed and watch TV and fold laundry. My life is fucking pathetic.
I don't think I'm particularly single-issue, but my views on a bunch of issues tend to line up with the Democrats: pro-choice, pro-gay, pro-helping people who are struggling, pro-raising my taxes to pay for better schools, etc. I believe in the public good, and I believe that those who can pay a little more to support things like schools and libraries should do so. In 2008 I voted for Obama in the primary, though it was a tough call between him and Hillary. In the end, Obama won my vote mostly because he had voted against going to war in Iraq and Hillary had not.
But certainly the fact of his race had something to do with my vote for him as well. I was, and am, very proud to have played my tiny part in electing a black man to the White House, for a whole host of reasons. We are an amazingly, wonderfully diverse country, and it's one of our greatest strengths, so I'm very glad to see the presidency begin to reflect that diversity. Obama, with his ties to places like Kenya and Indonesia, also seemed like a desperately needed corrective to the American isolationism of the Bush years, and I believe his election went a long way towards rehabilitating many people's view of America around the world. He is also an incredible role model here at home for young black kids -- and, I would hope, for kids of all races and backgrounds.
Also, as Kat said, I believe he is a genuinely thoughtful person, which I value hugely in someone making the kinds of decisions he has to make every day. I trust him to give each matter serious thought and to seek out as much information as he can. He may still make decisions I disagree with, but I feel reasonably sure they won't be due to stupidity or an inability to understand their nuances or consequences.
I wonder how much Obama's team learned from GWB's campaigns (and how little Romney's team or McCain's team did). I'm shocked at how close both of those elections were, even with the electoral votes (+4 in 2000 ~+30 in 2004). I don't know how Republicans perceive GWB, but do they think he was successful president with a clear mandate? Because those seem like shockingly close electoral races. Esp. given that most people win with at least 200 EVs more than their opponent.