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Edited on Mon Dec-20-04 06:29 PM by bobweaver
About two weeks after the election, our neighbor Virginia came over to visit us and we all sat in the backyard. She is a very sweet and nice lady who has been a good friend to my Mom, but I know that she is conservative and her husband is one of those angry white conservative men that will mouth off at the slightest trigger. I never say a word to him. They are both in their 70s. This day it was just Virginia, my Mom, me and my liberal friend Tom.
I said to Virginia, "So are you happy with the election results?" "Oh yes," she said. "What was the most important issue for you?" I asked. "President." she said. "How did you decide who to vote for, for President?" I asked. "Well, I watched the debates, and Bush said, 'What's right is right, and what's wrong is wrong." After a pause, she continued, "That's what I agreed with." (*) My friend Tom said, "What about the deficit? Did you consider that when you voted?" Virginia said, "No, what is it?" Tom stated a few numbers but it appeared to not mean much to her. I asked her what she thought about the mayoral election here in San Diego, which was still in dispute 2 weeks after election day. "Oh, we voted for Ron Roberts. We like him." Virginia said. "Did you know he marched in the gay pride parade?" Tom said. Her eyes opened wide and she said, "Did he? I'm going to tell my husband that when I get home." (Roberts is not gay but marched in the parade to get the support of the gay community, but he did not win the election.)
Virginia also told us that her church had placed leaflets in all the benches on the Sunday before the election, listing what issues were most important to that church and therefore to the members of that church, and directing the church members to vote for the candidates who support the church's side of those issues. It did not list any actual names. I also saw a similar publication being distributed at my Mom's catholic church. It did not list any candidates by name, but the text of the publication made it abundantly clear who they wanted the church members to vote for. It was obvious that they were convince the members to vote for the candidates who were strongly pro-life and against gay marriage. The catholic version of the publication also went further to suggest that the member was not a good catholic if they voted for a politician who was pro-choice or pro-gay rights. In the same publication, they did state support for peace, social justice and an end to poverty, but those were not emphasized anywhere near the extent that the gay and abortion issues were. (*) After the conversation with Virginia, I downloaded transcripts of the 3 Bush-Kerry debates and the VP debate, and did a search for the phrases "right is right" and "wrong is wrong" in all 4 debate transcripts. Nobody in any of the debates said those phrases.
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