Swedish Meatballs
14 hours ago
Meanwhile, Europe’s Internet lag is a thing of the past. The dial-up Internet of the 1990s was dominated by the United States. But as dial-up has given way to broadband, Europe has more than kept up. The number of broadband connections per 100 people in the 15 countries that were members of the European Union before it was enlarged in 2004, is slightly higher than in the U.S. — and Europe’s connections are both substantially faster and substantially cheaper than ours.Read More......
In Iowa, Democratic attendance at the caucuses topped Republican turnout by better than 2-1, 239,000 to 118,000. In New Hampshire, where there was worry about running out of ballots, the divide was narrower but still clear — 287,000 Democrats to 238,000 Republicans.Love her or hate her, if Hillary becomes our nominee, she will help close this enthusiasm gap. Read More......
These are hardly traditional Democratic bastions. Something is going on out there at the moment....
Look at it this way: Senator John Sununu of New Hampshire, the first-term Republican already facing a tough race against former Gov. Jeanne Shaheen, could not have been happy to count nearly 50,000 more Democrats than Republicans marching to the polls in his state.
Many other Senate and House Republicans could be put in harm’s way if the enthusiasm gap persists or expands.
“I think it is obvious that the Republicans ought to be concerned about the fact that Democrats are bringing in so many new voters and turning out so many people for these early contests,” said Stuart Rothenberg, a non-partisan political analyst.
If I did not have trouble believing that there were dinosaurs on Noah’s Ark, I might follow this man – and the very pleasant Chuck Norris, of course – to the ends of the earth.And on Hillary:
But then, as a young Hillary Rodham once put it, “Emotion without thought … is pitiful.”Read More......
I don’t for a moment begrudge Hillary her victory on Tuesday. But if victory came for the reasons we’ve been led to believe – because women voters ultimately saw in her, exhausted and near defeat, a countenance that mirrored their own – then I hate what that victory says about the state of their lives and the nature of the emotions they carry forward into this race. I hate the thought that women feel beaten down, backed into a corner, overwhelmed and near to breaking point, as Hillary appeared to be in the debate Saturday night. And I hate even more that they’ve got to see a strong, smart and savvy woman cut down to size before they can embrace her as one of their own.
Democrat Dennis Kucinich, who won less than 2 percent of the vote in the New Hampshire primary, said Thursday he wants a recount to ensure that all ballots in his party's contest were counted. The Ohio congressman cited "serious and credible reports, allegations and rumors" about the integrity of Tuesday results.I'm sorry, I'm as upset about voting irregularities as the next guy, but it's not clear to me why a recount is going to make up for any of the potential problems in NH (e.g., racism, name-order on the ballot). Having said that, it's nice to see someone on the Democratic side paying attention to the ballot-credibility issue, even if he does come across as a bit crazy. Read More......
Deputy Secretary of State David Scanlan said Kucinich is entitled to a statewide recount. But, under New Hampshire law, Kucinich will have to pay for it....
Candidates who lose by 3 percentage or less are entitled to a recount for a $2,000 fee. Candidates who lose by more must pay for the full cost. Kucinich's campaign said it was sending the $2,000 fee to start the recount.
Everybody has a theory about the remarkable resurgence of Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire. She "cried her way" to victory. Or she had a better vote-pulling operation. Or she benefited from a "Bradley effect" of white voters reluctant to actually pull the lever for an African-American candidate. But what seems just as plausible as any other explanation is also the most ironic: that New Hampshire Democrats -- and especially Democratic women -- were sick of the corrosive hostility and naked slant of the mainstream media against her.Hmmm... I'm not sure how you "badly interpret" a double-digit lead in the polls. Yes, the pollsters may have screwed up, but I am not going to fault the media when all of us - ALL of us - including Hillary's own team, were convinced that she was going to lose because the polls said she was going to lose by a huge margin. Read More......
The polls that had showed Barack Obama well ahead of Clinton were not so much wrong as misleading -- or at least badly interpreted by journalists too eager to write Clinton's political obituary. In fact, the polls correctly measured Obama's share of the vote. What happened during the contest's last few days was that the undecided broke for Clinton, and the question is why.
Without depriving her and her campaign team of any credit they deserve for her late revival, it seems quite possible that all the cheap shots and hate bombs finally backfired on Clinton's aggressive adversaries in the media.
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