UNITED States

Kim du Toit posts this comment from Adam Yoshida:

The Democrats are now talking about how this is a signal that Bush should “bring the country together”. Translated into American, this means “now that you’ve won, you should surrender to us.” The hell with that. We’ve won. Winning means not having to say you’re sorry. Bush already brought a majority of Americans together: they voted for him. He doesn’t need to reach out to [Democrats]: they need to reach out to him.

If anyone needs to work to “bring the country together” it’s those on the left who have divided it so badly. Those who sought to destroy this great man should get down upon their knees and beg the victors for mercy. And maybe, just maybe, we’ll let a few of them linger on for the simple reason that they amuse us. My life’s goal is to see the Democratic Party virtually obliterated and left as a rump of people like Stephanie Herseth who both mostly agree with us anyways and are easy on the eyes.

That’s the future of the Democratic Party: providing Republicans with a number of cute (but not that bright) comfort women.

Oh. Heavens. I hope that last sentence isn’t true. Can you imagine Hilary as a “comfort woman”? [shudder]

Election observations

Glenn Reynolds, has a new article up for the British paper, the Guardian. Worth a read. It’s linked in this post’s title, too.

Roger Morrow has this succinct observation:

“First President Bush was misunderestimated.

Now he has been unredefeated.”

[heh]

William Dyer observes this election’s historic place in spreading democracy, here. (A cogent, on-target observation about one campaign in the War to Preserve Western Civilization 😉

Carol Platt Liebau shouts “O Happy Day!”

A Small Victory notes the reaction of some of her moonbat friends and aquaintances to this new day, here. Commenting, for example,

“I woke up to a very different world in which people I assumed were rational Democrats are spitting poison nails. I received some nasty emails and comments (since deleted) that were alarming in their venom and hatred. People I never had a harsh word with were suddenly knocking down my virtual door to leaving the equivalent of letter bombs. This did not frighten me so much as make me sad.”

And Polipundit lists six reasons he labels the election results a “mandate” for W and his party.

Hugh hewitt, posting in the early hours–about 3:45 CT—noted the contrast apparent at that time between Pete Coors’ concession and sKerry’s recalcitrance (sKerry has, of course finally conceded):

“Pete Coors is a gentleman. Trailing by less than 50,000 votes out of nearly 1.8 million and with 12% of Colorado’s precincts yet to be tallied, Pete nevertheless took a calm look at the numbers and called Ken Salazar to concede. Classy.”

Well, that’s enough for now. Go. Read.

Finally, the obvious becomes… umm, obvious, to sKerry?

See Link

Or—just read the entire text of the ABC “News” release here [heh]:

Kerry Concedes Election
Kerry to Make Concession Speech in Boston, Bush Set for Re-election Victory

Sen. John Kerry conceded defeat to President Bush in a phone call this morning. (Reuters)

Nov. 3, 2004 — Sen. John Kerry will publicly concede the presidential election this afternoon after a victory in the battleground state of Ohio appeared hopelessly out of reach.

“Appeared”?

Walking down the center stripe. “What’s that comin’ over the hill, yonder, Ma?” “Cain’t tell from here, Pa. Looks like a semi, but let’s wait til it runs over us to say for sure.”

Now Thank We All Our God

Thanksgiving will be celebrated early here, this year. A clear majority in both the ECV and the popular vote for President Bush will make it difficult for sKerry and his ilk to pull an Algore. Aside from a disappointing loss by Pete Coors in Colorado, substantial gains in both the House and Senate for the President’s party will mean an opportunity to be a uniter… from a position of strength (wanna throw some tantrums? Go sit in the corner for a time out… 🙂

So, here’s my signoff for this long election night:

Now thank we all our God,
with heart and hands and voices,
who wondrous things hath done,
in whom his world rejoices;
who from our mother’s arms
hath blessed us on our way
with countless gifts of love,
and still is ours today.

O may this bounteous God
through all our life be near us,
with ever-joyful hearts
and blessèd peace to cheer us;
and keep us in his grace,
and guide us when perplexed,
and free us from all ills
in this world and the next.

All praise and thanks to God
the Father now be given,
the Son, and Holy Ghost,
supreme in highest heaven,
the one eternal God,
whom earth and heaven adore;
for thus it was, is now,
and shall be evermore.

Words: Martin Rinkart (1586-1649), 1636
trans. Catherine Winkworth (1827-1878), 1858

(And if you don’t think we ought to be singing that song full bore, consider what Martin Rinkert was thankful for during the 30 Years’ War… )

Stayed up to hear the fat lady sing

It’s 3:17 a.m., 11-03-04. This just in from Realclearpolitics.com:

Presidential Race – State by State Results

Bush-274
sKerry-228
Indiana (11)
Vermont (3)
Georgia (15)
Maine (4)
D.C. (3)
Texas (34)
Wyoming (3)
Oregon (7)
Kansas (6)
Michigan (17)
Utah (5)
Montana (3)
Arizona (10)
Idaho (4)
Florida (27)
Ohio (20)
Alaska (3)

(With apologies to RealClearPolitics for adding the essential “s” to sKerry’s name)

This may change… for the better, as New Mexico might well drop into Bush’s column, and Iowa is looking better and better. Bush already leads in Iowa and is still gaining in the count there by close to 20,000 votes, with 2063 of 2079 Precincts Reporting.

I think I’ll sleep for a coupla hours, now.

Breathing easier, now?

Looks like a solid majority in the popular vote, so far, for President Bush. Solid gains in the House and Senate. Possibly as many as 320 ECV. Enough to compel a concession from Jean Fraud sKerry? Probably… not. Or at least not one he won’t (or can’t) flip-flop on…

We’ll see, won’t we? If the Mass Media Podpeople had shut up about their stupid (and almost invariably wrong—or at least misleading) exit polls, the gap would likely be larger. Maybe even large enough to have depressed the Left Coast Dems a little. Payback from the real world for the Florida panhandle depressed vote of 2000.

Oh. Well. Take what comes, come what may.

Anyone checking here: check

http://www.worldmag.com/ and

http://news.yahoo.com/electionresults

For regularly updated maps showing ECV and breakdowns of the vote state-by-state.

Update: OK, the 320 may be over the top optimistic, but over 300 isn’t unrealistic, at this stage. 🙂

Things are going well… on several fronts

While Bush is racking up the ECV and leading or doing well in all the states he must (and some of the “bonus” states, as well), Senate races are also going well.

And on the voter intimidation front, Lori Byrd at Polipundit notes a report that

” …the GOP has a list of documented Democratic voter intimidation cases longer than your arm. Or, longer than a John Kerry speech. Or, longer than John Edwards spends fussing with his hair. You get the idea.”

Add that to the Daschle embarrassment for the Dems in SD (no matter how the race turns out), and “litigating the race” (and doing so via the Mass Media Podpeople) becomes problematic for the Dems.

As many have noted: if the polls are still open, call Uncle Zed and Aunt Polly and get them, their kids and their dogs down to vote.

And pray.

Maybe pray first. And keep on.

🙂

Ten Reasons to Vote for Bush

Thx to Carol Liebau for referring to the California Republic blog Some good stuff there, including “Top ten reasons I’m voting for Bush today” by Steven Zak. Here’s a part of his list. Read the rest at the link.

10: Michael Moore, who cheers for terrorists — I mean, “Minutemen” — in Iraq, and who dedicated a book to terror enabler Rachel Corrie. Among his disciples, who reveal themselves by adopting his talking points, are John Kerry and Osama bin Laden.

9: George Soros, the billionaire financier of far-left organizations like Moveon.org, so bent on single-handedly ending the Bush presidency that he has donated over $15 million toward that end. Soros fails to understand — or doesn’t care — that democracy means everyone’s voice counts, not that the will of others can be nullified with sufficient cash.

8: Soros wannabe, B-list actor Matt Damon, who recently confessed to his own fantasy of eliminating the voting input of other Americans by buying the election. “I would pay $1 million to have Kerry in the White House,” he told a crowd in Germany. (My own fantasy: I pay a million to have Damon permanently disappear from every movie screen and video store in America.)

7: Dan Rather and CBS, who made their own effort to hijack the election using fabricated documents to denigrate President Bush — an appalling attempt at anti-democracy by trickery. As if all is nonetheless right with the world, Rather will be there, reporting away, on November 2.

It’s a “top ten countdown” so go read the rest, and stick around for others’ commentary there, as well.