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The number of eligible adults that didn't vote outnumbered the number of votes that each candidate got.
Chris Matthews and Keith Olbermann both asked on their programs, "if this country is so 'Christian,' why is 'Desperate Housewives' the number one show?"
The phenomenon is two fold: First people project. Plenty of people in the exurbs who think they're so Christian will eat up that show, while simultaneously playing pious.
The second is that most of the people who WATCH that show didn't vote. They didn't vote because they're too busy shoveling down QPs, pricing Chevy Tahoes, getting high, playing playstation, going to Maroon 5 concerts and watching Rodeo on TV. And there are PLENTY of left-wing people who didn't vote, because they either want the whole system to crash, or they think they're voting for the same party, either way.
I think that I was given a negative view of the protesters, as a child. My parents, both rural, and just slightly younger than the "hippie" movement didn't participate in any of that, and probably didn't know anyone who did, either. I would say their families were of the "Sonny Liston" contingent, during that time.
Since my parents weren't overly dogmatic, overly establishment or overly Christian, I never got any of the "protesters and the left are killing 'murica" rhetoric, and there was never any real distaste voiced by my parents toward the protesters. They were more of a novelty, than anything else. And my parents were pro-union and Democrats when I was young. (They both still are Democrats, but my dad is a DINO).
My opinion, sorry to say, was largely informed by "Family Ties," which might have been the first place I ever heard about Richard Nixon, Hippies, etc. I instinctually knew to believe the parents -- that Nixon was the asshole, and the hippies were good. Why? Because my parents raised me with like MORALS -- and lying, warmongering and cheating were bad, and love, spirituality, standing up for the little guy, and being close to nature was good.
I believe I learned a little about the protesters, in American History, but it was the MEDIA that gave me the negative view. Same as gay-pride parades, they would always capture outrageous streaking shots, or whatnot, and try to make them look like freak-a-zoids.
Now, one thing that one has to remember about the gen-Xers, is that we went through the "pseudo-hippie"/grunge marketing phase, when most college kids, including, and if not especially frat boys went through the hemp necklace/Phish/Woodstock sponsored by Coke phase, so we HAVE this fake hippiness as part of our culture.
While many people, if not most, have moved onto the cookie-cutter house in the treeless cul-de-sac, that period influcenced many lives, including my own. I never started listening to Phish until last year, but that early 1990s, right before "Puff Daddy," era was sort of a hippie re-birth. Fake for some, but an important learning experience for others, and thought it was never intended to be political that time -- mostly trendy -- it did introduce many to this kind of "hey let's just fucking chill," kind of lifestyle that countered the "go getter" attitude of the 1980s.
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