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can be done in many ways.
Please don't take the following rant personally. I am a little tired of saying this so I found myself incapable of writing it without strong seasoning:
<rant> 1. There is no freaking way in hell that the result was going to be overturned and John Kerry inaugurated on January 20th. What was not conceding going to buy anyone?
2. Okay some of the people who refuse to get over this say stuff like, "if Kerry had made a deal out of it, it would have gotten the attention in the media and we could have gotten the American people to see how they were being ripped off."
To those people I have to say: Wake the fuck up!!! Where WERE you in Nov-Dec 2000? The fraud was FUCKING BLATANT in 2000 and what happened?? And now some of these people are saying Gore should run again? The guy who couldn't overcome blatant fraud for a mere 600 votes in 2000, and yet these same people think Kerry is a "wuss" for not kicking and screaming when he was down by 3 million in the popular vote and 120,000 in the contested state??
</rant>
Okay calmer now....
3. As said in a post above, it was NOT a "quick" concession.
4. A military analogy. A crack sniper is separated from his unit and his position is about to be overrun by a large force of the enemy. If he doesn't move, he dies. Sure, he'll take out a few of them on the way - hell, maybe even a lot - but if he survives he'll be able to do much more from a safer position. He has one chance to escape and get to that safer position. Does he escape, with the expectation - but not a sure thing - of being able to take out many more of the enemy in the future? Or does he stay and go down fighting right there?
I say he escapes to a safer position so he can continue to fight. And I think that is what JK did. He needed to retain his credibility as a Senator and that wouldn't have happened if he had held out.
5. The wheels of justice grind very slowly and JK the former prosecutor would know this all too well. Short of something cataclysmic which could never have gone in his favor, no legal effort would have come to resolution by Jan 20, therefore nothing could have changed who got inaugurated on Jan 20. (or did a S.C. justice get swapped out between 2000 and 2004 when I wasn't looking?)
Okay, that's all I can come up with for now. To me the real thing that sticks in my craw when people bring this up is the context of the 2000 election. For me, September 11th really happened on December 12, 2000 - not only because if Gore was President, the World Trade Center would still be standing, but because that is the day U.S. democracy died. And people blaming John Kerry for 2004 will not do one fucking thing to change that.
He did everything he could that made sense to do, and kept his powder dry to follow through in other ways, which he is doing.
Some people just will never get it though. No explanation he could ever give will change their minds. And you know what? I don't think it matters a whole lot to people who aren't politically active. Outside of political blogs and occasional mentions in political meetings, I have heard NO ONE complain about Kerry conceding. In fact, I heard one prior Dean supporter at work (a non-politically active person, mind you) who actually complained about my mentioning the election protest on Jan. 6th. "Aw, it's over. Just let it go" was the attitude. So no, based on my little view of the world, there would be nothing to gain by Kerry trying to reach the public generally with any explanation of his concession. They.Just.Don't.Care. Really.
So there's my thoughts, since you brought it up. Sorry for the incoherence, I just thought for a change I would just let the words flow. (Now you can see why I normally don't do that.)
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