Abstract Musings

Documenting the random thoughts of a cluttered mind

An Observation

One of the many reasons for the President’s historic victory was the increased turnout of Bush voters in the Kerry states. No doubt, many of these voters were Democrats who voted for Bush, but I think that many were also Republican voters who, for one reason or another, decided to stay home in 2000, but were moved to cast ballots for the President this time around.

I’ll offer up some anecdotal evidence to support this. In 2000, my brother-in-law was attending school in New York. He choose to vote (for Bush) by absentee ballot in Tennessee, his home state, to avoid the stress of dealing with his in-laws, who supported Al Gore. (I can’t help but note the irony of New York state voters supporting a Tennessean candidate for president, while the voter from Tennessee cast a ballot against said candidate.)

Another example, one of my wife’s college friends was attending Columbia University in 2000. My wife very diligently encouraged her friend, who grew up in Kentucky and is a solid Republican voter, to vote in 2000, especially to cast a vote against Hillary since neither my wife nor I could. After the election, my wife emailed her friend to ask if he had voted. His reply went something like this, “Yeah I did, not that it matters or that it will do any good.”

In both cases, the people I know voted despite the uncomfortableness of dealing with friends, family, co-workers and neighbors who did not share their views, or the discouragement that their vote would not affect the eventual outcome. Sure, these are only two examples, and not a statistically valid sample. But I can’t help wondering, if the people I know were discouraged or pressured about the election, how many others were in the same circumstances, but decided to sit that election out. I will probably never know. But I think it is something worth considering.

Voice of Reason

Lawrence Lessig has some advice for Kerry supporters.

He is our President – legitimately, and credibly.

Our criticism of this administration must now focus narrowly and sharply: on the policies, not on the credibility of the man.

The Democrats would be wise to avoid the shrill behavior of the last four years. It served no purpose, other than to alienate their party from a large percentage of the populace. To continue with such behavior when Bush was decisively elected, will result, I think, in the further marginalization of the Democratic party. In short, I agree with Lessig that they must focus on criticizing the President’s policies and not his motivation for those policies, or his lack of legitimacy.

Read the comments too. There is some reflection going on over there. Perhaps, these are the first small steps toward the revitalization of the Democratic party.

UPDATE: It seems I might have been too optimistic when I posted this. Glenn Reynolds has written yesterday and today about some examples of Kerry supporters expressing both disapproval with and contempt for those who voted against their candidate.

Say It Ain’t So

Could Microsoft’s Windows Mobile OS be coming to a Treo near you?

I have an older Handspring Visor and I choose it because the PalmOS does the things that I want a PDA to do, and it does them with out getting in my way. Windows Mobile devices are more like a computer in your pocket, a bit overkill for me. Oh well, I still want one.

Arafat Is on Death Row

Yasser Arafat has been in a coma since Wednesday evening and is now in critical condition according to Reuters.

His doctors still haven’t identified the cause of his illness.

Peggy Noonan Is Back

Peggy Noonan is back at the Wall Street Journal.

The leaders of the Bush effort see it this way: A ragtag band of more than a million Republican volunteers who fought like Washington’s troops at Valley Forge beat the paid Hessians of King George III’s army.

Welcome Right Wing News Visitors

John Hawkins of Right Wing News has selected this blog as his Website of the Day. Thanks John.

Welcome to those of you visiting from Right Wing News. I hope you’ll have a look around.

I have enabled comments for this post, and if you are so inclined (and have a Blogger login), feel free to leave a comment to let me know what you think of my blog, or drop me an email.

Land of the Free, Home of the Brave

Osama bin Laden:

In conclusion, I tell you in truth, that your security is not in the hands of Kerry, nor Bush, nor al-Qaida. No.

Your security is in your own hands. And every state that doesn’t play with our security has automatically guaranteed its own security.

Yes, it’s true. America’s security is in the hands of its citizens. And yesterday those citizens resoundingly declared: We choose security through strength and perseverance, not cowardice and shame. Today, I have never been prouder of my fellow citizens. During a war with a shadowy enemy, who seeks to strike the weak and intimidate the bold, we turned out in record numbers to choose those who will govern us. Regardless of the individual choices we made, we declared to bin Laden, al-Qaeda, and the world that we will not retreat at the hint of danger. This election was a victory for all Americans, and for democracy at home and abroad. We are truly the land of the free and the home of the brave.

O thus be it ever when free-men shall stand

Between their lov’d home and the war’s desolation;

Blest with vict’ry and peace, may the heav’n-rescued land

Praise the Pow’r that hath made and preserv’d us a nation!

Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,

And this be our motto: “In God is our trust!”

And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave

O’er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

Francis Scott Key, The Star-Spangled Banner

Captain Ed has some related thoughts.

Winners and Losers

Here are my winners and losers from the election of 2004:

Winners: W (Doh!), John Thune, the Republicans, the blogosphere, Mason-Dixon Poll, Iraq, Afghanistan, Swiftboat Veterans for Truth, Clarke County (Ohio), Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama

Losers: John Kerry, Tom Daschle, the Democratics, Dan Rather, MSM, exit polls, Zogby, Iran, North Korea, Michael Moore, Barbara Striesand, Bruce Springsteen, George Soros, MoveOn.org, Rock the Vote, the Guardian newspaper, the U.N., Jacques Chirac, Osama bin Laden