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-   -   Election Day Thread (https://greekchat.com/gcforums/showthread.php?t=130242)

PeppyGPhiB 11-07-2012 02:35 AM

My feelings re: president are more of relief.

My feelings as a Washingtonian tonight are of joy. We're all mail-in ballot, so votes are still being counted, but it appears we've voted to legalize marriage and marijuana for all!

happilyanchored 11-07-2012 02:51 AM

Watching CNN project Obama as the winner and having the four-five hundred people around me immediately erupt into screams/cheers/tears has to have been one of the single most powerful moments of my life.

Also knowing I had a hand in ensuring Todd Akin was never given a chance to have a say in our government is a wonderful feeling.

What an election day!

moe.ron 11-07-2012 03:00 AM

Trump and Rove's melt = awesome. Can't wait for the daily show and colbert report covering the two melts.

PiKA2001 11-07-2012 05:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AOII Angel (Post 2188274)
Agree. My favorite quote of the night in response to how unfair the results of the night were, "We need to get rid of the electoral college and go by the popular vote!" Yeah, President Gore agrees with you. :rolleyes:

I think if we get rid of the electoral college it's only fair to get rid of the Senate as well ;)

Gusteau 11-07-2012 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DeltaBetaBaby (Post 2188264)
I don't think either one would have a particularly strong effect on my life, but I feel that Obama's policies are better for more Americans. Let's be honest: for well-off, straight, white people, the actual effects of one administration or another are pretty slim.

ETA: but on a personal level, man, does Romney seem like a dick

This x 10!

My friend and I were just saying this last night! The Preident's policies/"plan" can really only go so far - especially with such a polarized and extreme Congress. Partisianism is going to handcuff the potential for progress in the future, and would for either candidate. I do wish politicians on both sides of the aisle were more moderate in general.

Jill1228 11-07-2012 09:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PeppyGPhiB (Post 2188235)
I love vote-by-mail...even more after seeing some of the chaos erupting today. People trying to vote by email, lines so long that people have to take a day off work, polling places without power (and only electronic voting machines), voting machines with "glitches." Washington and Oregon: I love you!

I voted 3 weeks ago in Iowa. Love early voting

Quote:

Originally Posted by christiangirl (Post 2188267)
I can't stop laughing. Facebook is lighting up with the political memes. I am wheezing, I've been laughing so hard!

I was LMAO too
No more political ads...woot!

GeorgiaGreek 11-07-2012 09:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AOII Angel (Post 2188274)
Agree. My favorite quote of the night in response to how unfair the results of the night were, "We need to get rid of the electoral college and go by the popular vote!" Yeah, President Gore agrees with you. :rolleyes:

I love all of these statuses about "so glad I live in a democracy..."
Nope, it's a republic. You've even said it yourself if you've said the Pledge of Allegiance. Another hint to that is that if the fact we're using the electoral college instead of the popular vote.

MysticCat 11-07-2012 09:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2188284)
I think if we get rid of the electoral college it's only fair to get rid of the Senate as well ;)

http://forum.ship-of-fools.com/UBB-n.../notworthy.gif

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gusteau (Post 2188286)
Partisianism is going to handcuff the potential for progress in the future, and would for either candidate. I do wish politicians on both sides of the aisle were more moderate in general.

The conversation got interesting on CNN after the election was called last night, centering on what the results mean long term for the Republican Party. The gist was Bill Clinton made the White House a viable goal for Democrats again (Carville noting that the Democratic candidate has won the popular vote in 5 of the last 6 presidential elections) by moving toward the center, and that the question now is who in the GOP can do the same for it. I know I've heard many Republican friends say a similar thing: Their base is shrinking, and they have got to find a way to broaden it or they're going to have a harder and harder time in presidential elections. And that will involve moving away from the Tea Partiers and more hard-core conservatives and toward the center.

The problem is that these days, moderates don't win primaries.

Gusteau 11-07-2012 10:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 2188291)
The conversation got interesting on CNN after the election was called last night, centering on what the results mean long term for the Republican Party. The gist was Bill Clinton made the White House a viable goal for Democrats again (Carville noting that the Democratic candidate has won the popular vote in 5 of the last 6 presidential elections) by moving toward the center, and that the question now is who in the GOP can do the same for it. I know I've heard many Republican friends say a similar thing: Their base is shrinking, and they have got to find a way to broaden it or they're going to have a harder and harder time in presidential elections. And that will involve moving away from the Tea Partiers and more hard-core conservatives and toward the center.

The problem is that these days, moderates don't win primaries.

I agree wholeheartedly. I've always been pretty moderate and am registered independent, but my support has been more left leaning lately for this reason. The Republicans need to swing back to the center if they're going to be a viable party.

Honeykiss1974 11-07-2012 11:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by christiangirl (Post 2188267)
I can't stop laughing. Facebook is lighting up with the political memes. I am wheezing, I've been laughing so hard!

OMG they are! I died when I saw this one this morning:

https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphot...15112287_n.jpg

DeltaBetaBaby 11-07-2012 11:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MysticCat (Post 2188291)
http://forum.ship-of-fools.com/UBB-n.../notworthy.gif

The conversation got interesting on CNN after the election was called last night, centering on what the results mean long term for the Republican Party. The gist was Bill Clinton made the White House a viable goal for Democrats again (Carville noting that the Democratic candidate has won the popular vote in 5 of the last 6 presidential elections) by moving toward the center, and that the question now is who in the GOP can do the same for it. I know I've heard many Republican friends say a similar thing: Their base is shrinking, and they have got to find a way to broaden it or they're going to have a harder and harder time in presidential elections. And that will involve moving away from the Tea Partiers and more hard-core conservatives and toward the center.

The problem is that these days, moderates don't win primaries.

Yup, the GOP arguably tea-partied itself out of control of the Senate. Several of last night's losers beat out much more viable moderate candidates in primaries, e.g. Akin, Mourdock.

One interesting thing is that the socially conservative message should play well with Latinos, but they aren't able to pull it off.

pshsx1 11-07-2012 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jill1228 (Post 2188289)
No more political ads...woot!

YESSSSSSSS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

But we seriously had a praise break on campus last night when the results updated. The ratcheness was real, y'all.

Personally, I did a lot of work for this election and I'm extremely happy to see that work come to fruition. :)

AOII Angel 11-07-2012 12:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PiKA2001 (Post 2188284)
I think if we get rid of the electoral college it's only fair to get rid of the Senate as well ;)

I don't care if we get rid of it, it's just disingenuous to agree with it only when it suits you. The point is moot anyway, since Romney was only winning the popular vote before the West Coast votes poured in.

AZTheta 11-07-2012 12:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GeorgiaGreek (Post 2188290)
I love all of these statuses about "so glad I live in a democracy..."
Nope, it's a republic. You've even said it yourself if you've said the Pledge of Allegiance. Another hint to that is that if the fact we're using the electoral college instead of the popular vote.

Thank you GeorgiaGreek. I keep banging that drum, and no one seems to get it. We're in a republic, people.

Now I'm going to put on Bob Marley and go make french toast.

Psi U MC Vito 11-07-2012 01:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PeppyGPhiB (Post 2188277)
My feelings re: president are more of relief.

My feelings as a Washingtonian tonight are of joy. We're all mail-in ballot, so votes are still being counted, but it appears we've voted to legalize marriage and marijuana for all!

What exactly was the marijuna resolution? Was it just that it wasn't illegal according to the state of Washington anymore? Because the federal laws are still on the books.


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