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What Will it Say to Young People Like This if the Republicans Steal the Election Again?

Posted by Jill Hussein C., Brilliant at Breakfast at 2:20 AM on October 13, 2008.


The consequences of alienating young voters.

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I no longer expect elections to be fair. I no longer expect Republicans to respect people's right to vote. I no longer expect my vote to be counted. I no longer expect voting machines that accurately record the vote and that aggregate correctly. I now assume that the election taking place in less than a month will be stolen by John McCain and Sarah Palin with the help of the thugs they've whipped into a frenzy, the executives of the voting machine companies, and their shills in the media like Tom Brokaw, who has turned Press the Meat into a "Vote McCain" commercial.

But I am 53 and I am a cynic.

In 1968, another generation endured a year that saw its symbols of hope mowed down not at the ballot box but by bullets. Another generation wanted an end to the relentless feeding of the giant war machine. Another generation thought it could, through the ballot box, effect the changes that would end the Vietnam War. That generation saw its candidate of hope mowed down in the Ambassador Hotel, and the icon of the Civil Rights movement mowed down on a motel balcony. And it rioted in Chicago as a decent man who just happened to have the misfortune to be tied to the policies of an unpopular president nominated for the presidency -- and lose a close election to the hated Richard Nixon.

And for the next four years, there was unrest in this country, led by SDS, the Weathermen, and their ever-more-nihilistic brethren.

No wonder the McCain campaign is so obsessed with William Ayers. No wonder they want to tie Obama to him at the wrists and ankles.

But what of the young people of today; those shining faces you see at the Obama rallies; kids who have never been interested in politics until now; kids who have channeled all their expertise in new media and all their creativity into this candidacy; kids like M.C. Yogi:





It's easy for John McCain and his Campaign of Thugs to want to continue to fight the 1960's culture wars by embodying all the imagery that is familiar from that time into the solitary person of William Ayers. Bad Liberal With Bombs. That's all the mindless, toothless, brainless, chickenshit people in towns that Islamic terrorists wouldn't even think of bothering with can see. Bad Liberal With Bombs. It's so much easier to fight on that familiar terrain than to try to understand credit default swaps, after all.

And it's still possible that they may succeed. If you read Bradblog on a regular basis (as you should) and if you watch this documentary by Greg Palast, you won't be so certain that this election is a slam-dunk for Obama, no matter how much Republican shill Ed Rollins claims that it's a done deal.

In 1980, young people weren't all gung-ho about Al Gore. Gore didn't become a hero to the young until later on. But Barack Obama is one to these kids. If he loses because his campaign went down in flames, it'll be just another of those heartbreaking lessons that we all learn sooner or later -- that sometimes life just sucks. But if the Republicans take away these kids' hope for the future through disenfranchisement, vote-rigging, or any of the many other ways they've found to cheat, they just might find themselves thinking William Ayers was the least of their worries.

Digg!

Tagged as: youth vote, 2008 election

Jill Hussein C. blogs at Brilliant at Breakfast.


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Time to have US elections monitored...
Posted by: chuckjs on Oct 13, 2008 3:31 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
like the world insists on having in any non US country.

Your elections are a sham, your Presidents are a joke, and you country is the laughing stock of the free world.

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dangerous
Posted by: jstepp590 on Oct 13, 2008 7:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as the law is followed for the federal guidelines then it is up to people to make sure that they have the correct ID, correct addresses, etc., and there isn't a whole lot to be said about it.

If the election is flat out stolen through vote miscounts, then the author is right. The republicans will look back on Bill Ayers with nostalgia compared to the firestorm that will erupt as patriots take back our country and re-institute the rule of law using firing squads and the death penalty for treason. People like me will make very sure of it, no matter what anyone thinks and whether the courts get subverted into supporting their coup or not.

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Every time i get really discouraged
Posted by: Lauren on Oct 13, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
thinking they might steal it again, I am reminded that I can be a pacifist and also be glad that not all of my neighbors are too.

I think angry people will take revenge on them everywhere they go.

If they steal it again, the fury of the entire country will be against them.

They would not be able to govern, but perhaps that is what the real goal was all along, to cripple our government. If so, their efforts have been very, very successful.

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THE REPUBLICANS IN A 60'S TIME WARP
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Oct 13, 2008 8:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It was so easy then to create a riot. The objectors to everything were the young people. They are no longer young but many of them are still among the present day objectors. The addition of a whole new generation that suddenly wants to participate makes it different from the 60's. The Obama movement is across the board and all inclusive. White hair and piercing and tattoos have all come together. A 106 year old nun is sending her absentee ballot for Obama today. The Republican country club mentalitiy that thrives on exclusivity no longer works. They have disdain for the poor and the very people fighting their war. The "not quite white" (my term), non-citiznens, otherwise unworthy. Their club is weakening because of a lack of interest. They've been reduced to tactics too low even for politicians. The superiority they've assumed for so long has lost its clout. Most of us over the years have watched things change and we can only hope for better times by making sure it includes as many of us as possible. Simply put, if everyone has some money in their pockets they're far less likely to steal someone else's.

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