Originally posted by god's shoeshine:
Originally posted by Venerable Bede:
Originally posted by Doctor Doom:
The election was overwhelmingly decided by frightened, petty, small-minded people who couldn't stand the idea that gays in states hundreds of miles away might decide to marry, and that this was more of a threat to the country than wars on false premises or soaring budget deficits. Not much to be proud of there.
statements like this is precisely why democrats cannot win in the south and midwest. you continue to think that because you are, supposedly, intellectually superior to everyone else, you, and only you, must be right. and the fact that the candidate that best represents what you think lost, again, drives you nuts. denial just ain't a river in egypt. [/b]
i'd argue that the notion that the south and certain parts of the midwest (suddenly wisconsin isn't the midwest?) are somehow morally superior to the west coast and northeasterners is just as absurd. the gop ran a superior campaign, framing a couple of issues as a moral the basis for reelection. the democrats did poorly in this regard, they should have made (say) healthcare a moral issue. but they didn't the republicans are supperior in ruthless campaigning and that was that. to further point fingers and say things like 'you people think you're so superior' is going to further divide this country. you have to admit the geographic divisions cannot be good for the future of the country. [/b]
oh, i think you mis-understood me. i was simply pointing out that herr doom believes that he is correct, his beliefs are correct and that the left (which reflects his beliefs) is correct, and that any other beliefs are in-correct, wrong and intolerant. it's in statements like that that upset people.. . .believe it or not, people in the south and midwest do think about things like that. they do not want californians or northeast liberal elites telling them what's right and what's wrong. if you look at a county-by-county map breakdown of this election, it's still the basic rural/urban split - even in states like california. it just happens that there are more people living in the city than in the country in those states.
as for wisconsin. . .both it, iowa and minnesota are trending republican, and unless the democrats are able to reshape their message and do it with conviction, you could probably add wisconsin to the red states.