CBS gives Nevada to Bush but restrains on Ohio. The nets all seem to be battling on which state to hedge.
Up all their asses. Dubya wins.
CBS gives Nevada to Bush but restrains on Ohio. The nets all seem to be battling on which state to hedge.
Up all their asses. Dubya wins.
Election decided … seriously. We can wait some hours on Nevada, New Mexico and Iowa, but it’s essentially done.
Now let’s get back to the business of saving our civilization.
Per MSNBC.
They have currently called 269 electoral votes for Dubya, meaning worst case scenario a tie.
For the POTUS. Put that with Florida, and we’re looking pretty good. As far as I can tell, Fox was the first to call it, leaving them open for the next Moore mockumentary.
Looks like Election Day Tuesday, Litigation Day Wednesday. I expect no Kerry concession, as this is his destiny. Just ask him.
The girlfriend is verging on venturing off to sleep, frustrated that we don’t know yet who won.
However, things are looking better and better in Ohio, with Florida already in the books (take that, 2000).
And so long, Martin.
Congressman Pete Sessions has just been declared the winner in the hotly contested and recently redrawn 32nd over fellow incumbent Martin Frost. As I expected.
Current Presidential electoral tallies, per CNN, are Bush 193, Kerry 112, with several big players still too close to call (e.g. Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, etc.). At this time, no state called by the networks has changed hands from 2000.
I’m at the girlfriend’s for the vote tallying. I was a bad boyfriend and didn’t set up the wireless networking over the weekend as planned, so blogging will be light for a bit.
So far, things are playing out pretty much as expected on the states the networks have actually had the sack to call. It looks like questionable exit poll results and the 2000 Florida fiasco have left the decision-makers a little gun-shy.
No jitters, just a sense of calm and curiosity.
No matter the victor, the world will not end, the Islamist terrorists will neither immediately perish nor instantly bring about the downfall of Western civilization.
I’ll grant that a Kerry presidency will be a step towards a quicker peace and a greater acceptance in the global community. I do not view either of these issues a plus at this momentous crux in history. Kerry will pursue fuzzy ol’ Osama, and vigorously at that. It is a political requirement for his possible administration. He will work quickly to bring a state of stability in Iraq; however, not the longterm stability that is needed, as he will only work for a stable enough situation to tone down operations and begin an “honorable” draw-down. Other than Osama, the military aspects of the war against Islamic terror will begin to wane.
None of this means we are doomed. It only means that we would creep back to a pre-9/11 mindset. Osama’s capture or death would clinch this, and we would call victory and leave intact the dangerous environment that allowed an animal like Osama to grow and flourish. No, Western civilization would not immediately fail, but the long-term price for its survival would increase dramatically — a needed burden prolonged only to our children or grandchildren.
A Bush win would perpetuate the fight as is, pursued with energy and tenacity on several fronts. The war will be fought decisively; Bush simply and instinctively realizes it is better to fight it now with an iron gauntlet balanced by a promise of liberty. Whether now or later, that is the longterm formula for success, to offer opportunity of hope and destroy those who refuse.
Other than Bush’s tax plans, there is little domestically in either candidate that the libertarian side of me can support, but certainly Kerry’s plans are worse from my vantage.
Jitters, no. Doom, no. Hope, yes. Intrigue, definitely. Here’s some things I’ll be keeping an eye on tomorrow evening (and possibly Wednesday morning):
Okay, I’m calm. On the other hand, my girlfriend is fretting up a Texas twister. Apparently, so is blogger Phil Gray of Shades of Gray (Umbrae Canarum), who expresses his jitters at great length here.
Looks like Scott, a.k.a. the Fat Guy, has found one of the originals.
Scott claims he found it in the shower.
American deaths in Iraq were higher in July than June, up even more in August, and September was bloodier still, a casualty trend Senator Kerry tried to use to his advantage in the presidential debates.
October opened with an election pending but supposedly tenuous in Afghanistan.
Australian participation in the Iraq campaign was a key issue in the electoral challenge to the Howard government.
The American presidential campaign was in full swing and had to be a choice target.
October is now over. Afghanistan went to the polls with little incident. The appeasement movement failed in Australia. The American political season continued free of any successful terrorist activity, short of a video tape. And, despite an increased pressure on Islamist strongholds such as Fallujah, American deaths in Iraq were down from September and August (as of this writing).
October — a month of impotence and failure for the Islamist bastards. It’s a shame so many will go to the polls tomorrow in America with little or no knowledge of the coalition’s recent successes. As the saying goes, a building that doesn’t burn isn’t news, and apparently a story that doesn’t burn President Bush needs no fanfare.