By Shawn Macomber on 11.2.04 @ 1:08AM
Liberals promise bedlam in the streets if Bush wins.
Unfortunately, it appears that when Elizabeth Edwards speaks
some people actually listen. This sad fact might be innocuous
enough if the aspiring Second Lady were trading parenting or
dieting tips. But instead semi-reformed former Deaniacs and
Kucinich Kids seem to have latched onto Edwards' recent promise to a worried supporter that
post-election riots will not wrack the nation -- so long as the
Kerry-Edwards ticket walks away with it.
The suggestion, of course, is that there indeed will be riots if
John F. Kerry's boyhood dreams of ascending to his rightful
position as ruler of the universe are squashed by the result of
today's voting. It is just such a scenario for which a group called
No Stolen
Elections is currently preparing. The newly-minted organization
has already gotten more than 17,000 of the young and restless to
sign the following pledge:
I remember the stolen presidential election of 2000 and I am
willing to take action in 2004 if the election is stolen again. I
support efforts to protect the right to vote leading up to and on
Election Day, November 2nd. If that right is systematically
violated, I pledge to join nationwide protests starting on November
3rd, either in my community, in the states where the fraud occurred
or in Washington DC.
Among the better known John Hancocks adorning this pledge are
those of Jesse Jackson, Michael Moore, Gloria Steinem, Howard Zinn,
AFL-CIO Organizing Director Stewart Acuff, NAACP chairman Julian
Bond, Daniel Ellsberg, Green Party presidential candidate David
Cobb, and Barbara Ehrenreich, fresh from a stint as a New York
Times substitute columnist. Oh, and clearly we wouldn't want
to forget Adrienne Maree Brown, the dignified leader of the League
of Pissed Off Voters.
So what exactly are these folks planning to make sure that "an
unelected President does not enter the White House, like last
time"? Well, the group has first of all established a "Fair
Elections Advisory Council" of "international elections experts" to
make a call on Election Day as to whether the vote was "stolen"
again or not. If it has been -- and, let's face it, what are the
chances any "international elections experts" are going to certify
a Bush victory as just? -- No Stolen Elections will call its
"Urgent Response Network" into action, "to converge in the states
where the most serious fraud occurred, as well as in Washington
DC." And the group is promising to make Florida circa 2000 look
like a picnic.
"One thing that was missing from our side, but not from the
conservative side, in 2000 was street heat," Steve Cobble writes on
the group's website. "The GOP had their bourgeois riots, and their
crowds were consistently bigger and more vocal, which helped frame
in the media's mind the sense that their side had been wronged
because Bush had won but Gore would not give up…We encourage
people to work for regime change at home all day on November 2nd,
election day, and then prepare to return to the streets on November
3rd (and perhaps beyond), at predetermined, symbolic, convenient
locally-chosen sites."
All right, let's say what needs to be said: How bad can today's
America really be if lazy lefty agitators can "work for regime
change at home"? That's a pretty sweet gig compared to the
depravities visited upon real activists with actual spines in
countries such as Cuba -- a country, it is worth noting, the
American hard-left continues to romanticize. Beyond that bit of
absurdity, however, note that if Kerry wins the group has no
interest in "counting every vote." Instead they suggest gathering
instead to "celebrate Bush's involuntary retirement while also
setting out a strong statement on the war in Iraq." Clearly, it is
not the number of votes that concerns No Stolen Election, but the
outcome. Are they interested in voter fraud if it results in a
Kerry victory? Nope. These defenders of democracy will be too busy
partying in the streets to riot over that.
In fact, No Stolen Elections' biggest fear seems to be that the
saner elements in the Democratic Party will accept defeat. Cobble
criticizes Gore for holding back activists in 2000, noting, "This
was a mistake, and we don't believe the African American community
or the unions will be willing to follow the campaign's lead again."
Instead, Cobble said the activists will be in charge of these
recounts.
"We must prod the Democratic Party to stand up this time, not
just watch events occur in silence, as was largely the case in
2000," he writes. "We must encourage the few remaining respected
blue-ribbon truth-tellers in our society to stand up and be counted
-- people like Walter Cronkite, Jimmy Carter, Oprah Winfrey."
Oh, great. The inmates really are running the Democratic asylum
this year, and they want to crown Jimmy Carter and Oprah Winfrey
emperor and empress of U.S. elections. If we allow them to run the
country, it won't be good for anyone. Before it's over George W.
Bush could be in Siberian exile, while the much-despised Ralph
Nader is forced to drive laps in a Ford Pinto while jeering
activists hurl obscenities and tomatoes at him.
Brace yourself America. The aftermath of this election could be
much worse than a floor covered in formerly hanging chads.
topics:
Iraq, Africa, Unions