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	<title>Obama Health Care &#187; Election Night 2004: The Liberal Report a Year Later</title>
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		<title>Election Night 2004: The Liberal Report a Year Later</title>
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		<description><![CDATA[As I jetted the streets of Chicago in a perverse attempt to find a liquor store that still carried Mad Dog 20/20, I reflected on how odd timing could be.&#160; Not thirty minutes ago I was a doctoral student sitting in lecture at a prestigious, private university and now I was actively seeking a substance [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><P>As I jetted the streets of Chicago in a perverse attempt to find a liquor store that still carried Mad Dog 20/20, I reflected on how odd timing could be.&nbsp; Not thirty minutes ago I was a doctoral student sitting in lecture at a prestigious, private university and now I was actively seeking a substance whose sole purpose was the destruction of the brain I was just developing.&nbsp; Truthfully, this was the first time I was ever looking to buy some Mad Dog; though I do remember it floating around throughout my college years.&nbsp; So, when I jumped in my car I never thought that this search would be so difficult; I just assumed I could get it anywhere.&nbsp; But, as I continued to swerve my little Saturn from liquor store to liquor store, I kept receiving the same twisted dirty look from the staff when I asked where they kept their Mad Dog.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>After about an hour of scouring the city streets I hit pay dirt.&nbsp; The clerk had to go all the way to the back of the store, move some boxes out of the way and dig out my prize.&nbsp; When I went to the register the second clerk asked to see my I.D.&nbsp; As I reached for my wallet the first interjected quickly and said, &#8220;Now, we don&#8217;t need to see his I.D.&nbsp; I trust him.&#8221;&nbsp; With that he shot me a sly wink and bagged up my three bottles.&nbsp; He must have thought he was doing some underage kid a favor.&nbsp; I wanted to scream that I was really over 21 (by quite a many years) and decree the real reason I was purchasing this vile liquor.&nbsp; But I hesitated and thought, maybe it just makes more sense to him that a youngin&#8217; was buying such an inexpensive, atrocious alcohol.&nbsp; After all, what respectable doctoral student would?</P><br />
<P>At this point you may think this article to be about the trappings of a young alcoholic.&nbsp; Now, while working toward a Ph.D. may drive me into the bottle, I&#8217;m not quite there just yet.&nbsp; In all actuality, I was preparing for a party I hosted on November 2, 2004.&nbsp; The invitation read as follows:</P><br />
<P>All people and political parties are welcome to Election Night 2004!!! But, there is an agenda for the evening.&nbsp; If: <BR>1. John Kerry wins, I will have champagne for all.<BR>2. If Dubya wins, everyone will be required to drink 1 glass of Mad Dog 20/20.<BR>3. If Nader wins, I will personally buy an all-inclusive round-trip package to Hawaii for everyone who comes to the party.<BR>4. If, somehow, the Democrats win the election but the Republicans steal it AGAIN then we all will pile into our cars and make a break for Canada!<BR>Hope you can make it!!!</P><br />
<P>As I&#8217;m sure you can assume, the champagne was decidedly easier and much more expensive to obtain for the festivities.&nbsp; Also, I didn&#8217;t exactly have American Airlines on hold with 20 round trip tickets to Hawaii in anticipation of the greatest political upset in the last 100 years.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>As a reluctant Democrat, I spent the weeks preceding the election debating with my academic colleagues about who was going to win.&nbsp; With all the higher education Republicans being called into an undisclosed F.B.I. conservative protection program, these discussions were largely one-sided.&nbsp; The tenor is best characterized as having a measured optimism.&nbsp; Kerry was obviously intelligent; the fact that he &#8220;flip-flopped&#8221; on issues only proved he could in fact change his mind if given new evidence.&nbsp; And, of course, how could the character of a decorated Vietnam veteran ever be tarnished?&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>These discussions also provided ample opportunity for Bush-Bashing; I admit that I participated in these sessions with zeal!&nbsp; Now, our President Bush has never been seen as a flip-flopper.&nbsp; You either clearly knew his stance on an issue or you clearly knew he had no intention of taking any stance at all.&nbsp; I think Chris Rock summed it up best:</P><br />
<P>Reporter:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mr. President, What about the economy?&nbsp; When&#8217;s it going to pick up? </P><br />
<P>Bush: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Well, you never know.&nbsp; We&#8217;re talking to people. And economic indicators are indicating that indications are coming to the indicators. You know what I&#8217;m saying?&nbsp; Alright.</P><br />
<P>Reporter:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Mr. President, what about gay marriage?</P><br />
<P>Bush:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; F&#8212; them faggots!</P><br />
<P>November 2, 2004 finally rolled around.&nbsp; I was incredibly thankful that my near round the clock vigil of all the major media outlets would soon end; I hadn&#8217;t watched this much news coverage since the days following 9/11.&nbsp; At any rate, I ducked out of work, drove to my polling station and cast my ballot.&nbsp; Even up until the second I punched out my chad I was conflicted, but ultimately chose to follow my mind rather than my heart.&nbsp;&nbsp; I make this distinction because if I had voted for who my heart wanted, Nader would have been a single vote greater in Illinois.&nbsp; But, I bought into the hype that this election was just too important.&nbsp; As I said before, I am a reluctant Democrat.</P><br />
<P>The party that evening went well on its way and we watched the events unfold.&nbsp; Of course nothing surprising initially happened; states were falling where we all new they would.&nbsp; The northeast lit up blue, the south burned red.&nbsp; Like clockwork, within 5 seconds of the polls closing in Illinois it was awarded to the Democrats.&nbsp; I always take it as a matter of pride that my home state is the first blue beacon out to the west.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>My partygoers continued to munch through all the hors d&#8217;oeuvres and make small talk since it would be at least a couple hours wait until we started receiving a few of the &#8220;toss-up&#8221; state election results.&nbsp; And then it came &#8211; Kerry was projected to win Pennsylvania.&nbsp; Not wanting to fall prey to another Florida fiasco, we quickly checked out all the news outlets for confirmation.&nbsp; All except Fox News (surprise, surprise) had the same wonderful blue color enveloping Pennsylvania; at that point a Kerry win felt much more tangible.&nbsp; The South cards all fell for Bush, as expected.&nbsp; Our numbers looked horrible, but we knew we could add on California&#8217;s 55 electoral votes to put us at ease.&nbsp; Until this point in the evening I was guarded in my optimism, but now I started to allow myself to believe.&nbsp; Maybe we wouldn&#8217;t have four more years of Bush.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>The night rolled on and Florida fell as I expected but along came Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota in the win column for us.&nbsp; My eyes began to bore holes into Ohio on the TV map.&nbsp; I don&#8217;t think I moved from my position for sometime as I sat hoping for an answer.</P><br />
<P>I have never claimed to be a mathematician at any point in my life.&nbsp; Truth be told, in my first-year of college I was required to take a no-credit, remedial Algebra course.&nbsp; Nonetheless, on election night I found myself doing incredible calculations effortlessly in my head as I watched the returns come in from Ohio.&nbsp; It was still too close to call but Kerry was trailing.&nbsp; None of that mattered, each time I calculated the number of votes we needed I rationalized ways we were going to get them.&nbsp; After all, Democrats are lazy aren&#8217;t they?&nbsp; I had bet they were lounging around their houses all day, continually putting off going to the polls.&nbsp; I just knew they were watching T.V. like I was and suddenly realized &#8220;Oh damn!&nbsp; Look at those poll numbers.&nbsp; We had better go vote!&#8221;&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>Plus, we were heavily relying on the college vote.&nbsp; Having worked in colleges for many years now I&#8217;ve seen first hand just how adept students are at procrastinating.&nbsp; They probably were piling out of their residence halls right now and slowly trampsing over to the polls.&nbsp; Yeah, that must be it.&nbsp; I pinned my hopes of the election on the fact that lazy Democrats and procrastinating college students from Ohio were going to save the day.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>With fear starting to creep in, some of my companions began speculating about what four more years of Bush really meant.&nbsp; The realization that we were going to lose continued to seep its way more and more into our psyche.&nbsp; Needless to say, neither the champagne nor Mad Dog was drunk that evening.&nbsp; And, my smart-aleck friend who brought with him a packed bag in hopes of a free Hawaiian vacation somberly went home.&nbsp; The night ended on the familiar note of a build up minus a pay off reminiscent of 2000.&nbsp; I struggled to stay awake into the night, but eventually fell asleep in my living room with the TV on.</P><br />
<P>Let me pause for one quick side bar.&nbsp; If elections are going to keep ending like a Hollywood cliffhanger, can we all decide to move them to Friday?&nbsp; On the Wednesdays following these sleepless nights I get absolutely nothing done between the frequent dosing off and even more frequent refreshing of every media outlet I have opened up on my desktop.&nbsp; Days like this I am addicted to these websites even though I can get a better idea about what will be on next week&#8217;s &#8220;24&#8221; than I can about an election that already happened!</P><br />
<P>The early morning hours came without any news.&nbsp; I turned on the coffee pot, no news.&nbsp; I toasted my bagel, no news.&nbsp; I showered while occasionally craning my neck out of the bathroom to see the TV, no news.&nbsp; I was starting to get irritated.</P><br />
<P>Then came the Kerry concession speech; I knew it was coming, but just didn&#8217;t want to believe it.&nbsp; I wish I could say that he left me with some solace or hope in the future.&nbsp; I wish I felt united behind President Bush as the justified winner.&nbsp; But honestly, I cannot remember one word the man said during this speech.&nbsp; All I remember is thinking that maybe it was a good thing he didn&#8217;t get elected.&nbsp; I mean, for God&#8217;s sake, no President of the United States should ever be seen wearing a tie resembling something donated by the makers of Pepto-Bismol!&nbsp; Come on, you have to agree with me there!&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>Of course, this was just my humor consoling the incredible loss I felt in this moment.&nbsp; How could my calculations have been so off?&nbsp; Did the unreliable college students of Ohio sell our collective souls down the river because of a good drink special on campus?&nbsp; The parade of Bush parties all over the nation began to spring up and glow on my television screen.&nbsp; Bush was then able to give the triumphant reelection speech his father never could.&nbsp; As Bush supporters throughout the country were chanting enthusiastically &#8220;Four More Years&#8221; I sat down, put my head in my hands and muttered in a barely recognizable, guttural, pained effort of speech, &#8220;four&#8230;more&#8230;years.&#8221;</P><br />
<P>This article is not about what happened to the Democrats in losing this election.&nbsp; I merely tell my story of the election to one, set the stage for what we see in liberal America today and two, as a method of cathartic release for the emotions I still have bottled up.&nbsp; Looking back a year later, I can&#8217;t bring myself to hold Kerry solely responsible for this loss even though it seemed like a proverbial slam-dunk.&nbsp; What concerns me more is the attitude and rhetoric my fellow liberals have employed in the months since November.&nbsp; A year later I stand aghast at the senseless ramblings of individuals I thought to be patriots of this country.&nbsp; I believe in many of their virtues and ideals and thought I was standing shoulder to shoulder with them in a fight for what we believed in.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>Unfortunately, many of my liberal co-patriots have gone off the bitter deep end.&nbsp; It is sad to witness the disgust, bordering on hate, many have expressed for those who dared cast their ballots for Bush.&nbsp; I even heard remarks after the Hurricane Katrina catastrophe that &#8220;those people down South&#8221; should blame themselves for President Bush&#8217;s slow response in their time of need.&nbsp; After all, they are the ones who voted for him.&nbsp; I find such a sentiment revolting.&nbsp; These are the people we hope to serve and yet we have shown so little respect for them in the wake of this election.&nbsp; If they do not &#8220;get&#8221; that we can serve them better than the Republican right, who&#8217;s fault is that?</P><br />
<P>In my junior year in high school, my entire class was unexpectedly called down to our large auditorium.&nbsp;&nbsp; Not knowing why we were being beckoned, we hastened downstairs knowing the reason could not be good news.&nbsp; A month or so prior we had all taken the Pre-ACT and evidentially our results had just been received.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>My high school was supposed to be a rigorous college prep program and our combined Math scores were far below the national average.&nbsp; This is of course a foreshadowing to the future problems I would have in college requiring remedial coursework.&nbsp; In any case, the school administration had called us down to one, inform us of this fact and two, berate us for so horribly embarrassing the school by our poor performance.&nbsp; The principal spoke at us.&nbsp; The dean of students spoke at us.&nbsp; After about 10-15 more minutes of our own teachers criticizing our work ethic and performance to date I shot my hand into the air.&nbsp; I just couldn&#8217;t take it anymore.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>When I was finally called on I could actually hear the hundreds of heads sweep back in my direction to see what I dared to say.&nbsp; While what I said next was most definitely rooted in a rebellious, adolescent, smart-aleck rebuke to the administration, it was nonetheless a moment of truth and relatable to our current political situation.&nbsp; I said, &#8220;Now, if I do poorly on a test, then that is my fault.&nbsp; But, if ALL 400 of us do poorly on a nationally administered test, isn&#8217;t that YOUR fault?&#8221; as I pointed my finger in the direction of the faculty.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>As I am sure you can imagine, I got into an incredible amount of trouble for my outburst; but that does not mean that I was wrong!&nbsp; If Red-Staters who have lost their jobs, are having their daughters and sons die in the Middle East and are suffering through a horrendous federal response to a natural disaster are still voting for the man and political party responsible for their plight, how can we place blame for the election at their doorstep?&nbsp; We evidentially did an outright horrible job at teaching and explaining how we want to work on behalf of these honest, hard-working people occupying the land between Los Angeles and New York City.&nbsp; We did not show them how we have their true interest at heart and not just interests of the richest 1%.&nbsp; It isn&#8217;t their fault and there is nothing fundamentally wrong with them.&nbsp; The problem lies within our nation of real-life, working liberals.</P><br />
<P>I absolutely refuse to align myself with rhetoric of dejection, mistrust, and constant bemoaning of how we have been cheated.&nbsp; I have some news for all my fellow liberals out there&#8230;WE WEREN&#8217;T CHEATED!&nbsp; But, even if we were cheated, we cheated ourselves.&nbsp; I can&#8217;t believe that some of the most highly educated and respectable people in our nation are such incredibly sore losers.&nbsp; We aren&#8217;t on the playground anymore folks and there will be another day for another election.&nbsp; I have no confidence in President Bush either, but I do have confidence in us as a people.&nbsp; Besides, if Kerry was elected, we have to be honest, we were only hoping for a slightly less screwed up world than we already have.&nbsp; A messiah sent to heal the wounds in our country he was not.</P><br />
<P>We liberals here on the ground floor, living real lives, will not have success just happen to us.&nbsp; We have to create our own fortune.&nbsp; The Democrats may be the best we have and, unfortunately for us, the only thing they have successfully created is an ocean of failure.&nbsp; Just take a quick look at the results for the past 10 elections:</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1968 &#8211; Richard M. Nixon (R)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1972 &#8211; Richard M. Nixon/Gerald R. Ford (R)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1976 &#8211; James E. Carter (D)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1980 &#8211; Ronald W. Reagan (R)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1984 &#8211; Ronald W. Reagan (R)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1988 &#8211; George H. W. Bush (R)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1992 &#8211; William J. Clinton (D)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 1996 &#8211; William J. Clinton (D)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 2000 &#8211; George W. Bush (R)</P><br />
<P>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; 2004 &#8211; George W. Bush (R)</P><br />
<P>Are you able to see the problem?&nbsp; We have elected 2 Democrats to our nations highest office in the past 36 years and one of those was JIMMY CARTER!&nbsp; There are problems that pre-date the &#8220;Dubya&#8221; era of our history.&nbsp; We have to take a critical look into how this history and the Democratic Party has affected the nation of liberals of which I am proud to be a part.&nbsp; Proud yes, but not satisfied.&nbsp; We can be better than we have shown ourselves to be this past year.</P><br />
<P>One, we are not going to win allies by calling people stupid.&nbsp; It is just that simple.&nbsp; Liberals are quick to chastise President Bush for pushing around the world like he is Clint Eastwood in some Western.&nbsp; He is not well liked around the world because he is a bully and thinks he knows what is right; let&#8217;s not make the same mistake.&nbsp; Let&#8217;s not assume we naturally know what a family living in Stillwater, Oklahoma wants or needs.&nbsp; We may share in a collective American culture, but our individual experiences are far removed from one another.</P><br />
<P>Two, we are not going to win allies by looking down our noses at people.&nbsp; Do you remember the stuck up professors you had in college who thought they were God&#8217;s gift to the world?&nbsp; Did you like them?&nbsp; Of course not!&nbsp; Pretentious academics end their life in the solitude believing that they were always better than everyone else.&nbsp; Notice closely that I said their story ends in solitude.&nbsp; An important point here is that solitude doesn&#8217;t carry much voting power.</P><br />
<P>Three, we are not going to win allies by telling people how easy it would be to improve their situation.&nbsp; First off, I have rarely met a person whose situation was easy to begin with.&nbsp; Everyone has a story about the hardest thing they have ever had to deal with in their lives.&nbsp; To them it was difficult and, even if another&#8217;s experience was different, no one has the right to pass a value judgment.&nbsp; Everyone&#8217;s story deserves respect.</P><br />
<P>Many Red-Staters like their &#8220;situation&#8221; and don&#8217;t need people filling their head with the idea that there is something wrong with them.&nbsp; We have fought and are still fighting hard battles for equal opportunity.&nbsp; This means all people have the equal opportunity to lead any kind of life they want.&nbsp; I too get annoyed when NASCAR clogs up my nightly ESPN time, but being a fan of NASCAR does not infer that you also possess a lower I.Q.&nbsp; Again, I say we have constantly fought for the choice.&nbsp; Why would we begrudge anyone that?&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>We should learn from and show respect to the Republican Party and Red-Staters.&nbsp; They are ardent Americans and a large section of the population we hope to serve.&nbsp; Furthermore, when the Republicans took a presidential back seat in the 1990s, never once did I hear that they wanted to flee to Canada as I heard loudly exclaimed from many liberals this past year.&nbsp; I point the finger right back myself in this instance in reference to my Election Night invitation.&nbsp; How more un-American and juvenile can a person sound by saying that since I didn&#8217;t get my way I&#8217;m taking my ball and going home.&nbsp; If the Left is going to flee the country because the current King of the Right is still in office, I have to respect Republicans even more for deciding to continue the fight and not just <B>BLOW</B> town when Clinton held the same <B>JOB</B>.&nbsp; Remember, the Right was exactly too ecstatic when we had our president in the 90s.&nbsp; </P><br />
<P>Special Note: For those of you who want to move to Canada over election results my first instinctual response is to help you pack.&nbsp; We don&#8217;t need you here; you&#8217;re nothing but a pessimistic weight holding us down.&nbsp; But, if you really are willing to move over this, then could you at least take one for the team and move to Ohio?&nbsp; We need some more blue voters there.</P><br />
<P>The point is that I have not seen my peers leading with respect this past year and I call upon them to do so.&nbsp; I don&#8217;t care about the politicians; they are going to do what they are going to do.&nbsp; I say again that I am talking to the real world, working liberals where the true charge for change falls.&nbsp; We are better than this and only by being better are we going to reclaim positions of power in politics.&nbsp; It is 3 more years until the next election and I am guessing it is at least 8-12 more years before Barrack Obama can run.&nbsp; We need answers and leaders today.&nbsp; Get your game face on liberals!</P></p>
<p> Art Munin<br />http://www.articlesbase.com/law-articles/election-night-2004-the-liberal-report-a-year-later-3858.html</p>
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