what am I doing in this basket?

Friday, November 05, 2004

Election

In response to the multitude of distraught emails, the plethora of outraged conversations, the profusion of perturbed voice mails:

I have spent the last few days determining exactly how to respond to the shocking and horrifying results of Tuesday's election. Of course, I, too felt-and still feel-the anger, disbelief, and depression that many of my friends and family members have expressed. I still cannot watch or listen to any election commentary, and I don't know when I will be able to again.

My initial intention was to write back or call every person who had contacted me and share in their outrage. But then I started to get a few other emails of a related but different breed: humor.

Throughout my life, humor has been the tool that my family has used to diffuse tense and otherwise difficult situations. Rare is the funeral that goes by without a series of "stiff" puns; any trip to the hospital requires the retelling of the cache of doctor jokes.

And so, here are a few little items. Feel free to peruse some or none of them as your mood allows. Peace.

http://us.news1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/uc/20041106/spo041105.gif

and
http://www.buzzflash.com/contributors/04/11/con04485.html

Finally, Michael Moore:


Friday, November 5th, 2004
17 Reasons Not to Slit Your Wrists...by Michael Moore
Dear Friends,
Ok, it sucks. Really sucks. But before you go and cash it all in, let's, in the words of Monty Python, “always look on the bright side of life!” There IS some good news from Tuesday's election.
Here are 17 reasons not to slit your wrists:

1. It is against the law for George W. Bush to run for president again.

2. Bush's victory was the NARROWEST win for a sitting president since Woodrow Wilson in 1916.

3. The only age group in which the majority voted for Kerry was young adults (Kerry: 54%, Bush: 44%), proving once again that your parents are always wrong and you should never listen to them.

4. In spite of Bush's win, the majority of Americans still think the country is headed in the wrong direction (56%), think the war wasn't worth fighting (51%), and don’t approve of the job George W. Bush is doing (52%). (Note to foreigners: Don't try to figure this one out. It's an American thing, like Pop Tarts.)

5. The Republicans will not have a filibuster-proof 60-seat majority in the Senate. If the Democrats do their job, Bush won't be able to pack the Supreme Court with right-wing ideologues. Did I say "if the Democrats do their job?" Um, maybe better to scratch this one.

6. Michigan voted for Kerry! So did the entire Northeast, the birthplace of our democracy. So did 6 of the 8 Great Lakes States. And the whole West Coast! Plus Hawaii. Ok, that's a start. We've got most of the fresh water, all of Broadway, and Mt. St. Helens. We can dehydrate them or bury them in lava. And no more show tunes!

7. Once again we are reminded that the buckeye is a nut, and not just any old nut -- a poisonous nut. A great nation was felled by a poisonous nut. May Ohio State pay dearly this Saturday when it faces Michigan.

8. 88% of Bush's support came from white voters. In 50 years, America will no longer have a white majority. Hey, 50 years isn't such a long time! If you're ten years old and reading this, your golden years will be truly golden and you will be well cared for in your old age.

9. Gays, thanks to the ballot measures passed on Tuesday, cannot get married in 11 new states. Thank God. Just think of all those wedding gifts we won't have to buy now.

10. Five more African Americans were elected as members of Congress, including the return of Cynthia McKinney of Georgia. It's always good to have more blacks in there fighting for us and doing the job our candidates can't.

11. The CEO of Coors was defeated for Senate in Colorado. Drink up!

12. Admit it: We like the Bush twins and we don't want them to go away.

13. At the state legislative level, Democrats picked up a net of at least 3 chambers in Tuesday's elections. Of the 98 partisan-controlled state legislative chambers (house/assembly and senate), Democrats went into the 2004 elections in control of 44 chambers, Republicans controlled 53 chambers, and 1 chamber was tied. After Tuesday, Democrats now control 47 chambers, Republicans control 49 chambers, 1 chamber is tied and 1 chamber (Montana House) is still undecided.

14. Bush is now a lame duck president. He will have no greater moment than the one he's having this week. It's all downhill for him from here on out -- and, more significantly, he's just not going to want to do all the hard work that will be expected of him. It'll be like everyone's last month in 12th grade -- you've already made it, so it's party time! Perhaps he'll treat the next four years like a permanent Friday, spending even more time at the ranch or in Kennebunkport. And why shouldn't he? He's already proved his point, avenged his father and kicked our ass.

15. Should Bush decide to show up to work and take this country down a very dark road, it is also just as likely that either of the following two scenarios will happen: a) Now that he doesn't ever need to pander to the Christian conservatives again to get elected, someone may whisper in his ear that he should spend these last four years building "a legacy" so that history will render a kinder verdict on him and thus he will not push for too aggressive a right-wing agenda; or b) He will become so cocky and arrogant -- and thus, reckless -- that he will commit a blunder of such major proportions that even his own party will have to remove him from office.

16. There are nearly 300 million Americans -- 200 million of them of voting age. We only lost by three and a half million! That's not a landslide -- it means we're almost there. Imagine losing by 20 million. If you had 58 yards to go before you reached the goal line and then you barreled down 55 of those yards, would you stop on the three yard line, pick up the ball and go home crying -- especially when you get to start the next down on the three yard line? Of course not! Buck up! Have hope! More sports analogies are coming!!!

17. Finally and most importantly, over 55 million Americans voted for the candidate dubbed "The #1 Liberal in the Senate." That's more than the total number of voters who voted for either Reagan, Bush I, Clinton or Gore. Again, more people voted for Kerry than Reagan. If the media are looking for a trend it should be this -- that so many Americans were, for the first time since Kennedy, willing to vote for an out-and-out liberal. The country has always been filled with evangelicals -- that is not news. What IS news is that so many people have shifted toward a Massachusetts liberal. In fact, that's BIG news. Which means, don't expect the mainstream media, the ones who brought you the Iraq War, to ever report the real truth about November 2, 2004. In fact, it's better that they don't. We'll need the element of surprise in 2008.
Feeling better? I hope so. As my friend Mort wrote me yesterday, "My Romanian grandfather used to say to me, 'Remember, Morton, this is such a wonderful country -- it doesn't even need a president!'"
But it needs us. Rest up, I'll write you again tomorrow.
Yours,
Michael Moore
MMFlint@aol.comwww.michaelmoore.com


2 Comments:

  • Here's an election response from my friend Courtney:

    Our country is now like a poor relative who has to completely bottom out with an addiction before he or she can get help. The people in the country have refused to recognize the addiction, or the precipitous downturn in the life of our country. It will take four years of continued environmental degradation, an unjustified and unwinnable quagmire in a now-destabilized country that doesn't want us, continued global isolation, a record-setting and unprecedented budget deficit, and another generation of young people lost to poverty, racism and unavailable healthcare before the majority realize that we have hit bottom and there is nowhere to go but up.

    If the American people are so self-satisfied and certain in their us-versus-them extreme moralistic certitude and refuse to see the hypocrisy upon which they stand, then it is up to us -- the 48 percent who see the danger -- to stage an intervention. It will be no less painful and no less gut-wrenching than a personal intervention with a family member. But we must do it. We must stage an intervention, beginning now, because we love the country, and we believe that we can make things better -- those statements are not platitudes for us, but part of our value system and part of being a true patriot.

    The other aspect of an intervention is that we can love the person, but not their behavior. In spite of the bitterness that we might feel, we must set aside some of it and work with the other party, the ones sitting on the other side of the table, because it is the only way we will get things done over the next four years. We can hate intolerance with every fiber of our being, but we can't stoop to it.

    By Blogger 2kool4skool, at November 8, 2004 at 2:45 PM  

  • An old friend from Massachusetts just emailed me a petition urging President Bush to restore school prayer. At the bottom it said, "Madalyn Murray O'Hair is dead. Let her legacy of atheism in our schools die with her!" They seem such an angry bunch. It conjures the images of torches in the night, frenzied villagers dragging innocent women to the stake, burned alive in the name of God. I replied that many of my friends were not Christian and how dreadfully unfair (to say the VERY least) it is that our President ONLY validates Christiantity especially when we consider that the country was not only founded on religious freedom, but the separation of Church and State. I'm scared, very scared.

    But then I read the stuff by Michael Moore and my outraged friends and I still have hope. Slowly, but surely I'm regaining my footing. Laughter is always the best medicine. Thanks!

    -S xo

    By Blogger Shannon Brazil, at November 10, 2004 at 10:43 AM  

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