The saddest thing.
Nov. 5th, 2008 09:27 pmThe saddest thing is that when, in a few months or years, all those of my friends who have committed their emotion and excitement and happines and spiritual joy to their LJs today, come back and read them again, most of them are likely to look for excuses rather than to say honestly: "We were in a mood to be deceived, and we let ourselves be deceived. This was done with our willing collaboration." They will blame people like me, or political opponents, or the Jews - anything rather than admit that they asked, begged, sought to be deceived.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 03:40 am (UTC)1) I am not an American citizen and cannot vote in American elections;
2) I have otherwise done all I can, down to the admittedly ridiculous length of an open invitation not to vote for him (http://fpb.livejournal.com/357975.html), divided into two arguments, one for non-Catholics and one for fellow Catholics, both of which I regarded as compulsive. I admitted at the time that that sounded pathetically self-important, but at least you cannot say that I did not do everything that was in my power to avoid a result that still worries me deeply.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-10 05:56 am (UTC)No, obviously you can't vote and your ability to influence a US election is limited. But most of the people behind the "Impeach Obama!" movement are all Americans, as far as I've observed.
I'm choosing to wait and see what he actually does and does not do. I sure don't think there's a chance he's going to accomplish everything he said he'd accomplish, but no point in writing him off yet.