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But this blog will still be alive. I’ll be covering a host of topics, of course, but now instead of election views…it will be views on the Obama administration and the actions it takes. I love how that sounds…Obama administration. :)

I hope you will join me as I keep dissecting the issues as they affect me and they affect you, and make your views heard as well.

Dear America,

Finally.

Finally we have overcome so many hurdles, so many years of pain, so many years of suffering, of ignorance.  Finally we have opened our eyes and see not in color, but in competence.  We see abilities, we see potential, and we can finally see past race.  We have finally chosen someone who deals not in fear, but in hope.  We have finally chosen change.

Thank you for helping Barack Obama to win this election.  Thank you for restoring not only my faith, but the faith of most of the country, if not the world in the America’s humanity.  After eight years of George W. Bush, thank you for turning the tables and calling for us to seize our place on the world stage again not as a war monger, but as a bringer of stability, and of peace.

My dad was watching the results pour in and commented “I didn’t think I’d actually live to see this.”  I don’t think I thought I would see it either, and if I did, I thought I would have been much older.  This is a testament to the power of the youth, in part, but also a testament to the changing views of the country.  We are fast becoming a country that cares less about the superficial, and that’s a very encouraging sign.  No amount of smear tactics, no amount of false rumors could derail us from our goal: change for the better.

This is not to deny that John McCain was a good candidate, but unfortunately he just wasn’t right for this time and wasn’t right for our country’s needs as they stand now.

Change is here, change is finally here.  :)

Love,

Saroj

I’m excited, above all, and that’s really the understatement of the year.  I am excited to see the country possibly regain some sense of dignity.  Yet I’m also worried that there will be the ignorant pockets that will be voting for candidates for all the wrong reasons, regardless of who the candidate is.  There will be those who are taking campaign promises at face value and not doing any real digging on their own.  There will always be those people.

I would love to see an Obama-Biden victory, I see that as the best possible future for our country.  While of course, politically, he has the right outlook for the country, there’s also the (oft’ discounted) fact that he has brought this excitement and hope to politics that I have never seen before.  Someone who is capable of generating such a positive reaction certainly is someone that I would not mind being in the White House.  This is, of course, compared to Bush.  He came across as an ignoramus, and (surprise surprise) lived up to the hype.  If he had a solid plan for the country, despite his coming across as an idiot, I could deal with that.  Yet he dropped the ball on both counts.  Obama, in stark contrast, has both the plan and the personality on his side.  More importantly, though, he has the plan.

Check back for results later on in the night, as the polls start to close and the votes are tallied.

It looks like it will be an Obama victory.  Expect updates every so often as the results start to trickle in.  What are your thoughts so far?  Who’s going to win and why?

No, no dear I’m not a first timer.  I voted once for president by absentee ballot, this is my first presidential election voting in a voting booth.  I’m just having trouble with the stupid curtain, thank you very much.

It’s some surprise that we haven’t all upgraded to newer, sleeker voting machines.  Instead, we here in my hometown are stuck with voting machines Noah must have used to punch his ballot.  Seriously…it’s kind of silly.  But otherwise, I had a mercifully short voting experience.  The line was oh…five minutes.  Thank goodness for multiple polling locations in one town, and even funnier that we’re a pretty small town.  I think I may have killed myself otherwise.

The other source of amusement: how a lot of people were looking at me like “holy crap, it’s one of them young, non-white ones!”  The rest of the people voting (at least when I went) probably were an average age of 50…plus or minus ten years.  All were white, except one guy signing in voters and one woman who I think was a voting official.  Welcome to my world.

I’m surprised at how Republican my little corner of New York is.  New York, though, always goes blue and the same will be the case today.  So I’m not too worried.  It’s just the rest of the country I’m worried about.  While I feel bad pushing my views on other people, I think here it’s ok to be a little pushy.  All you people who live in Ohio, Virginia, Colorado, Florida, and Pennsylvania…PLEASE VOTE FOR OBAMA.  Ultimately the choice is yours, I’m just helping you make that choice.  :)

Let’s hope for change today, change for the better, a change for a brighter future.

For now, I want to go to one of those election parties!  To quote from my brother “today feels like Christmas!”  I swear he meant it jokingly.

It’s the classic developmental cliche: the disenfranchised youth.  Gone are the marionnette strings and off they go, puttering about, trying to establish their views on the world without the influence of parents.  Faith, whether it’s in religion or anything else, tends to fall by the wayside.  Cynicism reigns supreme.  So does faith have a place in the minds and hearts of the youth, or is it better suited for the later years, when the tumultuous waves of adolescence and young adulthood have subsided?

Ok I’m pretty religious myself…more like spiritual, but this isn’t a call for people to flock to religion per se.  It’s about having something that anchors you to some reality, to some constant, to some truth…  For me, that’s spirituality and science (two seemingly irreconcilable entities, but they work surprisingly well together).  For another person, it may be economics (ok not sure about that in the current economic climate but who knows).  To not have anything to hold on to seems almost inhuman.  To be apathetic means to not fulfill a core aspect of our being human: to believe in something.

Faith gives direction and faith gives strength.  Faith in a politician could both settle our own nerves and give that person the strength they need to see their mission through.  Faith in a set of ideals lends credence to those ideals.  Faith can be misplaced, but that’s part of the learning process; knowledge and experience is key to well-placed faith.  Faith should never be forced onto another person or onto one’s self, it is something that is personally grown and nurtured, not force-fed.

In this election, we cannot afford to be apathetic…we have to have faith.  Our collective faith was misplaced eight years ago, and again four years ago, but not anymore.  We cannot sit on the sidelines and cite our lack of interest, or a lack of faith as a reason to not vote.  Not now, especially not now.  I’m not saying vote for Obama or vote for McCain.  I’m saying get excited about someone or something in this process, this is about redeeming our country from eight years of ignorance and rash decisions that have cost us our place in the eyes of the world.

The youth are finally getting swept up in the urgency of the moment, they have found grounding in the messages of our candidates, but still it seems as though most are seemingly uninterested, thinking that this decision is still not that important, thinking that politics are still beyond their scope of interest or caring.  It’s time to drop these notions and join the fray.  Pick an issue you feel strongly about, pick a candidate who sees your vision for a successful America as their own, and have faith!

Walt Handelsman, I am not, but I like doodling…especially in this election season. :)

Comments would be welcome.

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