Friday, November 07, 2008
The election has made me ill
Monday night I had nightmares about Obama winning and the worst-case scenarios that radical far-right talking heads predicted and then McCain won and all the worst-case scenarios from the radically left media predictions came true. I woke up easy enough and then I went to work, where I realized we were going to be handing out free coffee all day with no extra employees on the floor to handle the extra customer count. It was harrying for the first few hours, but by the time I took a lunch break and came back, I had a pretty nasty headache and I started feeling weaker and weaker. I voted in the mid-day after I got off work, and had a headache for most of the next two days. Thursday, I went to work and my first class with a headache and then started feeling a little nastier. I stopped by my prof's office to drop off the paper that was due and to apologize for skipping class, and then drove home through rush hour traffic where I fell into a delirium of hot flashes and chills, sore throat and nausea, not to mention the continual headache. After I gagged at the nothing I had put in my stomach since midday on thursday, I started feeling a lot better and had some chicken-noodle soup, some crackers and my baby got me some jello and vitamin C.
In other news, I've heard several people in the liberal media talk about how much we need to come together as a nation and unify and stand behind our president. I find it interesting that they have decided we should all do this when the president they voted for has been elected and were less focused on standing behind the elected president 4 years ago. I've also noticed, in listening to news, that Obama's biggest problems are going to come from his democratic-voting supporters. There is a large pocket of people who tend to vote liberal/democrat because they are optimistic and/or feel that the world would be a better place if only we would elect the RIGHT president (not that there aren't conservative/republican voters who feel the same way, but conservatives tend to not be quite so optimistic). So now, Obama is going to have to live up to the hype that has been built up around this election. People actually believe that he will turn around the economy, provide jobs, lower taxes and end the war, single-handed. I do hope that whatever programs our federal government work out will accomplish these things. Lord knows we need more jobs and some of the basic foundations of our economy need to be reset in order to fix this mess into which the banking and real estate industries have put us. I do agree that we should stand behind our president, whether he is a knuckle-head or is merely from a different idealogical camp, because it isn't about getting my way: it's about all of us working together to do what we think will best help our nation. So, I'll work hard at my job, spend money on the things I can afford, do my part to help my neighbors and my community and pray and hope that our new President will make wise decisions that benefit us all, and President-elect Obama will do his best to fix what's wrong with our country in the way that he thinks will work. In four years, I may decide not to vote for his re-election and if I choose to do so, I will because I think that I'm doing what's best for the country.
I hope his supporters recognize that Obama is not our Savior, and though he may be a good man and a good leader, he is, at the end of the day, just a man. I hope that in two years when not all of his promises have been fulfilled, that his supporters will continue to support him as president, even if they think they might vote differently in the next elections, because turning around the economy and satisfactorily diminishing the troop presence in Iraq is going to take some time. I hope the "us versus them" feeling that's been going around will die down a little bit now that the election is over, because it has literally made me sick. Or maybe that was substituting at middle and high schools 3 days a week...
In other news, I've heard several people in the liberal media talk about how much we need to come together as a nation and unify and stand behind our president. I find it interesting that they have decided we should all do this when the president they voted for has been elected and were less focused on standing behind the elected president 4 years ago. I've also noticed, in listening to news, that Obama's biggest problems are going to come from his democratic-voting supporters. There is a large pocket of people who tend to vote liberal/democrat because they are optimistic and/or feel that the world would be a better place if only we would elect the RIGHT president (not that there aren't conservative/republican voters who feel the same way, but conservatives tend to not be quite so optimistic). So now, Obama is going to have to live up to the hype that has been built up around this election. People actually believe that he will turn around the economy, provide jobs, lower taxes and end the war, single-handed. I do hope that whatever programs our federal government work out will accomplish these things. Lord knows we need more jobs and some of the basic foundations of our economy need to be reset in order to fix this mess into which the banking and real estate industries have put us. I do agree that we should stand behind our president, whether he is a knuckle-head or is merely from a different idealogical camp, because it isn't about getting my way: it's about all of us working together to do what we think will best help our nation. So, I'll work hard at my job, spend money on the things I can afford, do my part to help my neighbors and my community and pray and hope that our new President will make wise decisions that benefit us all, and President-elect Obama will do his best to fix what's wrong with our country in the way that he thinks will work. In four years, I may decide not to vote for his re-election and if I choose to do so, I will because I think that I'm doing what's best for the country.
I hope his supporters recognize that Obama is not our Savior, and though he may be a good man and a good leader, he is, at the end of the day, just a man. I hope that in two years when not all of his promises have been fulfilled, that his supporters will continue to support him as president, even if they think they might vote differently in the next elections, because turning around the economy and satisfactorily diminishing the troop presence in Iraq is going to take some time. I hope the "us versus them" feeling that's been going around will die down a little bit now that the election is over, because it has literally made me sick. Or maybe that was substituting at middle and high schools 3 days a week...
Comments:
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aw, i'm sorry you're sick! it has been a stressful time for sure. i have to admit I chuckled at your nightmare a little, though...mostly because you're probably not alone! I think you're right on about Obama's main issue being living up to his own words. I think though that if he even makes it halfway there, he'll have done a hell of a job. I think he's a level-headed man who is not so cocky as to think he has all the answers, and has already shown he is able to take advice from others. At the very least, even Bush supporters ought to be happy to have someone who can speak in public:) I know I am! I did vote for him, and I don't think he's any Messiah whatsoever, and I hope that we are patient with him as well.
On another note, I don't think the media was so gung-ho about supporting Bush the 2nd time around and unifying the nation because they knew it was pretty much impossible. Who knows, maybe if Katie Couric had rallied the nation to support him, we wouldn't be so divided now. I sincerely doubt it, however. I am, this time around, optimistic as a liberal should be, that there is a possibility of at least more unity than we've seen in the last 4 years. And when I hear the conservative Christians from my home down South say they're praying for Obama, I hope it is simply prayer that he will make wise decisions and that our nation will not be divided, and not prayers that he will make his life's goal to overturn roe v. wade or keep "God" in the pledge.
On another note, I don't think the media was so gung-ho about supporting Bush the 2nd time around and unifying the nation because they knew it was pretty much impossible. Who knows, maybe if Katie Couric had rallied the nation to support him, we wouldn't be so divided now. I sincerely doubt it, however. I am, this time around, optimistic as a liberal should be, that there is a possibility of at least more unity than we've seen in the last 4 years. And when I hear the conservative Christians from my home down South say they're praying for Obama, I hope it is simply prayer that he will make wise decisions and that our nation will not be divided, and not prayers that he will make his life's goal to overturn roe v. wade or keep "God" in the pledge.
I have to agree with you. The libs crack me up with their koombaya talk of unity and "change", after they evicerated Bush starting immediately after the 2000 election (they didn't wait until 2004). They decided way back then that Bush was "selected" not elected and they were going to oppose everything about him. Remember the cynical democrats singing America the Beautiful on the capital steps, while behind closed doors they were conspiring to approve war declarations and then immediately betray the President and the troops and start calling them baby-killers, jackbooted thugs and other names.
Unity? When I see the Democrats begin to behave more like civilized and respectful human beings, instead of arrogant socialist totalitarians, then maybe I'll be able to return to the fold. But what I saw in the Democratic party and the liberals made me abandon the party, change my affiliation, and I have NO reason to go back yet.
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Unity? When I see the Democrats begin to behave more like civilized and respectful human beings, instead of arrogant socialist totalitarians, then maybe I'll be able to return to the fold. But what I saw in the Democratic party and the liberals made me abandon the party, change my affiliation, and I have NO reason to go back yet.
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