*frysquint*

Sep 03, 2008 22:10

Okay, so what's with all these "Election Spoilers!" cuts I've been seeing all over (aka, two) the place?

Are there people people who absolutely don't want to know who the candidates are until they walk into the voting booth on November 4th?

I suspect democracy was not meant to be run like a television episode premier.

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politics

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Comments 25

frenchroast September 4 2008, 14:12:58 UTC
...Where on earth did you see these?

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evadne_noel September 4 2008, 20:18:19 UTC
Boing Boing and scans_daily! Probably not the best barometers of true thought, but the second time I saw it, I had to wonder.

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frenchroast September 5 2008, 15:00:01 UTC
So I went to scans_daily, and...wow. Scary place. I think they were serious about the spoilers...which is even scarier. Damn the media.

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wilver_and_ecru September 4 2008, 19:40:14 UTC
Huh. I'm British, so I ought to have a reason to not keep up-to-date with the process. However, Channel 4 posts updates on it every time they show the news, so I don't. Have a reason, that is.

Anyway, the point is, if I know who the candidates are, and I'm in a different country, AND I'm not even consciously keeping up-to-date, why the hell don't the people who are supposed to be VOTING know?

Strange.

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evadne_noel September 4 2008, 20:20:30 UTC
Uh, yeah. Sorry about all that excessive news coverage.

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wilver_and_ecru September 6 2008, 11:49:30 UTC
Oh, I don't mind about the coverage. I just think it's stupid that people think that other people don't know who they're gonna be able to vote for. I mean, if it's been on a lot here, it must be on almost 24/7 in the US, right?

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evadne_noel September 7 2008, 03:47:34 UTC
Ohhhhh, yes. And we get attack ads. I wish November would get here faster.

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itemnumber_girl September 5 2008, 05:49:48 UTC
SPOILER! Snape kills Dumbledore at the end of the RNC.

I want to vote so bad in this election, but I'm not a citizen. I'm a geek when it comes to politics, though, and I'm driving my roommates insane with endless discussions on Obama and McCain.

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evadne_noel September 5 2008, 19:51:37 UTC
Aha, okay, now I'm imagining Snape taking Dumbledore out as everyone cheers and balloons drop from the ceiling.

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take_276 September 6 2008, 03:16:27 UTC
Probably. The sad truth is, elections are always decided by the people who know least about politics. If "swing voters" knew anything about government (i.e. the way that laws are passed and approved, the platforms of the political parties, the powers and limitations of the court, etc.) they would've made up their minds long before the campaign ads began running. I'm always amazed that their are still people out there who haven't figured out that the issues and arguments are always the same each election cycle.

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evadne_noel September 7 2008, 03:48:37 UTC
It's really kind of depressing how little things change, really.

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take_276 September 14 2008, 00:31:46 UTC
Yeah, it is. They used to play these old black-and-white newsreel clips on A&E, I think for teachers to record and use or something, and they were on really early in the morning. Sometimes I would watch them as I was getting ready for work, and I was always amazed at how much the political arguments sounded like the arguments of today. They'd be playing audio from FDR or Harry Truman--or one of their political rivals,--and it would sound exactly like the arguments on CNN or Fox News. Only without all the shouting. =]

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evadne_noel September 18 2008, 13:02:00 UTC
On the other hand, politicians used to beat each other up, which would definitely increase CSPAN's ratings.

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