moonshayde (
moonshayde) wrote2008-11-05 12:32 am
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Yeah, I admit it. I cried.
McCain and then Obama deeply moved me.
These are the days where I love my country.
McCain and then Obama deeply moved me.
These are the days where I love my country.
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*hugs the whole freakin' country*
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I'm so happy right now.
I just feel like we're really a UNITED nation right now.
For the first time in a while actually.
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I'm still crying. Every time I think I've gotten myself together, I think about it and start all over again. I guess I'll be crying all night.
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I hope he stays active on the national level, if he's willing to be a bridge builder with Obama. There's been talk the President Elect (squee!) will probably have Republicans in his administration, so who knows.
The country has been split between "red" and "blue" for too long, not just for cultural reasons, but due to so many thinking it had to be one way or the other instead of working together. Maybe that will finally change.
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But I agree with your look at the campaign. I may not be some political pundit, but I think three main things derailed McCain's campaign.
1. Losing his "maverick" touch and going with the party mentality. This includes the heavy negative attacks and brought him out of touch with the people.
2. Palin. She may have energized the right, but she alienated a lot of moderates and centrists.
3. The economic crisis. This killed him, imo. If this hadn't happened, I think this election would have been closer.
McCain had a horribly mismanaged campaign. His campaign became the antithesis of who he is as a person. Sure, he'll always be conservative, but he really should have played to his strengths then trying to remake himself as the traditional Republican. JMO.
I really want him to work with Obama on stuff. I really believe both of them have a lot to offer and it makes this moderate independent happy to hear at least the consideration of a bipartisan admin. Can you believe it?
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I often got the feeling he wasn't personally happy with how things were being run, but his advisors had convinced him it was the only way to win.
Palin certainly stirred up the vocal end of the spectrum, but I was very disturbed by what they were saying. Having someone in the audience yell out "Kill him!" about your opponent and not calling them on it is just inexcusable, IMO. That's one reason I liked how McCain was obviously peeved at that sort of think in his speech -- I think he'd had enough.
I think a bipartisan administration is the way to go right now. It used to be relatively common, but now it's relatively rare. You have to be on the "right team" before you're considered, even if you're totally unqualified for the job.
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And I'll admit it with you, I cried too!
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*hugs you*