On a black screen Michael Moore gives us 17 reasons not to give up. My favorites are the last two:
16. There are nearly 300 million Americans — 200 million of them of voting age. We only lost by three and a half million! That’s not a landslide — it means we’re almost there. Imagine losing by 20 million. If you had 58 yards to go before you reached the goal line and then you barreled down 55 of those yards, would you stop on the three yard line, pick up the ball and go home crying — especially when you get to start the next down on the three yard line? Of course not! Buck up! Have hope! More sports analogies are coming!!!
17. Finally and most importantly, over 55 million Americans voted for the candidate dubbed “The #1 Liberal in the Senate.” That’s more than the total number of voters who voted for either Reagan, Bush I, Clinton or Gore. Again, more people voted for Kerry than Reagan. If the media are looking for a trend it should be this — that so many Americans were, for the first time since Kennedy, willing to vote for an out-and-out liberal. The country has always been filled with evangelicals — that is not news. What IS news is that so many people have shifted toward a Massachusetts liberal. In fact, that’s BIG news. Which means, don’t expect the mainstream media, the ones who brought you the Iraq War, to ever report the real truth about November 2, 2004. In fact, it’s better that they don’t. We’ll need the element of surprise in 2008.
And my other favority is Paul Krugman, who begins his Op Ed piece with:
President Bush isn’t a conservative. He’s a radical – the leader of a coalition that deeply dislikes America as it is. Part of that coalition wants to tear down the legacy of Franklin Roosevelt, eviscerating Social Security and, eventually, Medicare. Another part wants to break down the barriers between church and state. And thanks to a heavy turnout by evangelical Christians, Mr. Bush has four more years to advance that radical agenda
and then he says what I, too, believe:
So what should the Democrats do?
One faction of the party is already calling for the Democrats to blur the differences between themselves and the Republicans. Or at least that’s what I think Al From of the Democratic Leadership Council means when he says, “We’ve got to close the cultural gap.” But that’s a losing proposition.
Yes, Democrats need to make it clear that they support personal virtue, that they value fidelity, responsibility, honesty and faith. This shouldn’t be a hard case to make: Democrats are as likely as Republicans to be faithful spouses and good parents, and Republicans are as likely as Democrats to be adulterers, gamblers or drug abusers. Massachusetts has the lowest divorce rate in the country; blue states, on average, have lower rates of out-of-wedlock births than red states.
But Democrats are not going to get the support of people whose votes are motivated, above all, by their opposition to abortion and gay rights (and, in the background, opposition to minority rights). All they will do if they try to cater to intolerance is alienate their own base.
Does this mean that the Democrats are condemned to permanent minority status? No. The religious right – not to be confused with religious Americans in general – isn’t a majority, or even a dominant minority. It’s just one bloc of voters, whom the Republican Party has learned to mobilize with wedge issues like this year’s polarizing debate over gay marriage.
Rather than catering to voters who will never support them, the Democrats – who are doing pretty well at getting the votes of moderates and independents – need to become equally effective at mobilizing their own base.
In fact, they have made good strides, showing much more unity and intensity than anyone thought possible a year ago. But for the lingering aura of 9/11, they would have won.
What they need to do now is develop a political program aimed at maintaining and increasing the intensity. That means setting some realistic but critical goals for the next year.
Democrats shouldn’t cave in to Mr. Bush when he tries to appoint highly partisan judges – even when the effort to block a bad appointment fails, it will show supporters that the party stands for something. They should gear up for a bid to retake the Senate or at least make a major dent in the Republican lead. They should keep the pressure on Mr. Bush when he makes terrible policy decisions, which he will.
C’mon Democrats! Push hard or get out of my way.
And make Dr. Dean head of the Democrative National Committee
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Joe Republican
A Day in the Life of Joe Republican made the email rounds a while ago. But if you haven’t read it, now’s the time.
My Blue America
I am so sorry you feel this way. If you actually had a clue as to what made this nation great, you would quit trying to suck the life out of it. America was founded on great conservative christian values (the Ten Commandments). You are free in this country to think and for the most part do what ever you want. But you do not have the right to hijack this country with your socialist values that undermine our national identity and security. We will continue to fight you and the terrorist with every fiber in our bodies. Because it is you who invited the terrorist into our country to kill our family members
The quote above is a comment left on my Radical Rosie post by someone calling him/herself “Righteous.”
Well, I say that those who don’t know our country’s history are bound to keep screwing it up.
Perhaps “Righteous” is referring to those “Christians” who fled from Europe to seek religious freedom, freedom from persecution. Oddly enough,
Although they were victims of religious persecution in Europe, the Puritans supported the Old World theory that sanctioned it, the need for uniformity of religion in the state. Once in control in New England, they sought to break “the very neck of Schism and vile opinions.” The “business” of the first settlers, a Puritan minister recalled in 1681, “was not Toleration, but [they] were professed enemies of it.”
Puritans expelled dissenters from their colonies, a fate that in 1636 befell Roger Williams and in 1638 Anne Hutchinson, America’s first major female religious leader. Those who defied the Puritans by persistently returning to their jurisdictions risked capital punishment, a penalty imposed on four Quakers between 1659 and 1661.
In other words, those righteous Christians became the kind of persecutors they were running away from. We all know what they did to those poor old women they decided were witches, right? But that’s another long and horrible story that needs truth telling about.
And let’s not forget all those Native Americans that were displaced and persecuted and executed by all of those righteous Christian members of our military:
Rotten Fruit
A GOP nemesis of mine has accused me of “sour grapes” for continuing to oppose Bush and his policies. I’m far from the only one who maintains that it’s not a matter of sour grapes; its a matter of some rotten fruit on the American political vine. Just check out these links:
http://www.blackboxvoting.org/
http://www.votergate.tv/
http://www.bluelemur.com/index.php?p=388
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1104-38.htm
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2004/11/3/52213/1921
http://www.buzzflash.com/analysis/04/11/ana04025.html

and then there’s my favorite tree-hugger
appropriately blue-hatted.
The liberal Brits are with us Blue Americans.
From blogger Glovefox (whose site is retricted), an email documenting that fact that Liberal Britain goes into depression and shock as it sides with the Blue States of America.
We are not alone.
And, just for more to ponder, a couple of relevant quotes:
— Adolph Hitler, 1933
(Proclamation to the German Nation at Berlin,
February 1, 1933).
(I think I’ll put the above in my sidebar.)
— Edmund Burke
Heh. Just found some other Hitler quotes that seems uniquely appropriate to what we just witnessed from the GOP:
— Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, Vol. I
— Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf
My Blogging Anniversary
In a couple of weeks, it will be Kalilily Time’s third anniversay. I started out on Blogger.com. Today I looked back at my very first posts. The more things change, the more they stay the same.
Pushing

The radicalization of the rest of us
P. Diddy may have stolen my years-old “VOTE OR DIE!” slogan and pimped himself all over the media as a result, but that’s okay, I’ve got a new one, although it’s not quite as sublime.
Push back, or get the Hell out of my way.
So ends b!X’s eloquent essay about his (and Portland’s) response to the election results. Be sure to follow the links, especially this one and this one for some graphically appropriate statements.
His links show that I’m not the only one advocating seceding from the broken Union. And maybe the time is coming to seriously think about moving to the proposed Republic of Cascadia.
Non-blogger myrln reports: Daily Show tonite: If you want to make same sex love or visit a library, this is probably the last night you can do so.
More than five decades of pushing back has made for a tiring political effort to keep America from falling off the Righteous edge, but, hey, there’s a dance in the ol’ dame yet.
And so I’ll still be pushing — only now even harder.
We are the True Majority
My friends have been calling. They’re all so depressed, angry. Do we get more involved in forcing change or do we opt out for the next four years.
This email I got from TrueMajority makes me feel like it would be worthwhile to get even more active:
There is a lot of bad news coming out of this election, and we won