Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Stemmen

"At our staff meeting this morning, my boss (who voted for Obama) said he got emotional when he voted. My boyfriend (who voted for Obama) told me he teared up when he voted (and he rarely cries). And when he went to the health food store, others were talking about how emotional they got… and they all started crying in the health food store! I have never heard of this behavior at the polls. I think it speaks to how badly we Democrats want change and how much hope we have in Obama’s spirit." -- Tom

"nyc, upper west side, I’ve been a 6am voter since my first presidential election; LBJ. In, out and on to work. This morning the line snaked out of the church and around two city blocks. After an hour and a half, I did what I came to do. I retraced my steps along that line and now it was three blocks long. Something is happening. it wonderful. Its democracy" -- Fred

"The United States has sent election monitors all over the world to act as watchdogs and insure fair and accurate elections - from Haiti to Zimbabwe. Meanwhile, in the USA, voting machines don’t work or break down, polling station staffs don’t know what their doing, have no oversight and are overwhelmed. How can this be? My polling station this morning had only ONE voting machine working, while two others were delivered BROKEN and the staff did not know to look on a provisional electors list to find additional names causing havoc and two hour wait times. There were many screaming people demanding their right to vote and refusing paper ballots by affidavit that are only counted 5 WEEKS LATER! Absolute chaos in the East Village of Manhattan - the richest city in the richest country in the world.
Shameful" -- Carl

"Push the lever all the way to the right. Whoooomp! Make your picks with tiny little levers that are sort of aligned with the candidate names. Click! Click! Click! Pull the lever back to the left. Whoooomp! I’m not sure if I voted or just took a bad aerobics class. Seriously, the New York City “machines” make you wonder if your vote is being registered." -- CB

"What passion! I just voted at a station in the Upper East Side. The location is also a school, so teachers had to “cut” past the line to go inside. Other, non-teachers, decided they didn’t want to wait on the line and pushed through also. The line that I was waiting on started yelling that they had cheated and that we should not have to wait if they didn’t. Much to my astonishment, verbal shouts moved to action and I was suddenly in the middle of a pushing swarm of upset, very passionate New Yorkers who were making headway through the door until an elderly gentleman, who was walking with assistance and had difficultly breathing, decided to exit through the “in” door. As a unit, the pushing swarm moved to the side to let him through, in silence. And then we all waited politely again. I’m not sure what changed, except that, for me, seeing someone who had to make such an incredible effort to come out to vote affirmed what is good and noble in human nature. Perhaps it had a similar effect on my fellow voters." -- H

"the line snaked around a long mid-manhattan block. people were cheerful and patient. made me wonder if i was actually in new york. Wonderful. i love new york. i love america and i love Obama." -- Jane S

"My husband, adult son and I got to the polls in Detroit at 6:30 am, for a 7 am opening time. We thought, hey, there might be a couple dozen people there waiting to vote before work.

There were 180 people already in line. I know, because the man in front of me walked the line and counted.

An older man, probably early 60s, was behind me in line with tears in his eyes. “I have never seen anything like this in my lifetime,” he said.

This is in a state that the GOP abandoned (officially; they long since have given up on Michigan) in a city that’s well over 90% Democrat, with no public transportation and the country’s worst unemployment and poverty rates. But people got up that early to come and vote.

I’m very proud of my city and I hope by day’s end, to be very proud of my country again, too." -- Janet V







Vier jaar geleden (kijk mijn blog er maar op na) opperde ik de mogelijkheid van Obama als president, en om 3:36 uur vannacht durfde ik er definitief in te geloven toen Ohio 'viel' voor Obama en zijn enorme team van verleiders, want alleen was het hem natuurlijk niet gelukt. Zojuist, net na 5 uur zwichtte ook California (zoals verwacht) en had Obama voldoende stemmen om de overwinning te claimen.

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