No right is more precious in a free country than that of having a voice in the election of those who make the laws under which, as good citizens, we must live. Other rights, even the most basic, are illusory if the right to vote is undermined.
- US Supreme Court

Thursday, May 29, 2008

the Democratic party and its lil attitude problem

Try this with your own wife, at home, if you dare.

Say to her,
"You know, I have screwed up our anniversary on more than one occasion, and you've always forgiven me. You love me anyway, and you get over it. So we're just going to skip all this anniversary crap. We all know you're going to forgive me anyway and - well, I just don't want to be bothered."
Now. If you take out the words "wife" and "anniversary" and replace them with "voter" and "election", you see why Obama's wife always looks so damned pissed.

“I know there are some people worried about the Democratic Party being divided. We will be united.” - Barack Obama

"I am confident I will get her votes if I'm the nominee. It's not clear she would get the votes I got if she were the nominee." - Barack Obama

update: the DNC realized they weren't being arrogant enough, so they found a new way to alienate its base even as it does an even better job making sure the election looks crooked. So now we have to add Nancy Pelosi promising us that, if Hillary Clinton does not quit voluntarily Nancy will personally intervene! From CNN:
Hillary Clinton has hinted that she is prepared to take her fight to fully seat Florida and Michigan all the way to the party's convention in late August, but House Speaker Nancy Pelosi says that's not going to happen.

In an interview with her hometown newspaper, the San Francisco Chronicle, the California Democrat said she is prepared to "step in" if the presidential race does not resolve itself by the end of next month.

"I will step in," Pelosi told the paper. "Because we cannot take this fight to the convention…It must be over before then."

Because we can't have the Democratic party actually being democratic, now, can we?

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