They are only seeing one side of the picture, they need to be educated as to what half of America is saying. We have serious problems in this country, even people who voted for B*** are against the war, dismantling Social Security, etc.
Click here to read this story online:
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0118/p01s04-uspo.htmlHeadline: In Ohio, election battles have cooled, but peace is uneasy
Byline: Liz Marlantes Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Date: 01/18/2005
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On the other hand, while Bush voters say they're glad their man won,
some also criticize the president's handling of certain issues.
Chaperoning their granddaughter's birthday party at the Victory Lanes
bowling alley, Rodney and Jackie Allen say they voted for Bush based on
his position on abortion and stem-cell research. But they strongly
oppose the war in Iraq - an issue that kept them on the fence until the
weekend before the election. Rodney says that while he likes Bush's
"Christian values," he is "not a Bush fan."
The Iraq issue has been an ongoing point of tension between the Allens
and Jackie's parents - who live next door to them and strongly support
the war - despite the fact that they all voted for the president. "They
know how we feel, and we know how they feel, so we just don't talk
about it," she says.
Similarly, Mike Berkshire, another Bush voter who's bowling with his
wife and friends, also expresses doubts about Iraq. Maybe it "had to be
done, but I don't think it was a good way to go about doing it," he
says. An engineer for the ethanol industry, his vote for Bush was based
largely on the president's support for expanding ethanol production.
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