MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Someone needs to come up with a graceful manner for Senator Clinton to withdraw from this race. There is no way, other than by an intra-party bloodbath, that a Republican could be elected president this year.
This is the year. You should be able to feel it in the air. Not since President Carter squandered the mandate given to the Democratic party after the unmasking of what Richard Nixon intended, and what so many Republicans enabled, has the country been so ready to announce that they had seen the light, realized what Republican leadership had brought us, and decided to change direction.
It will be difficult for any Democrat to lose this year, but as noted above, this country has struggled with slavery and its aftermath for its entire existence. We have made enormous progress, particularly since 1964, and since the mid 1990s have even seen what appears to be a light at the end of this long tunnel.
Ever since Governor Dukakis lost to Bush I after leading most of 1988, it has become hazardous to forecast the results of November elections from the vantage point of June. [Nonetheless, t]here is every reason to believe that the general election will be a rout. It will have no precedential value because, like 1932 and, to a lesser extent, 1976, there are aberrational forces at work which will alter normal voting patterns. (the 20% of Clinton voters who claim to be voting for McCain, will be down to 5, by September.)
Were this a competitive election (which it is not, solely because of George W. Bush, the savior of the Democratic Party), this would have been the week that Senator Obama's campaign started to unravel, not based on reason, but on inanity.
Please stop with the nonsense that there's [l]andslide victory in the air and everyone knows it. It's dumb talk like that and over confidence that leads to defeat. Obama is far from winning this thing, he's not even close.