Wednesday, November 03, 2004

Blog Election Gloat Roundup

Vodkapundit has this list of losers:
Michael Moore (you lose again, lardass)
Terry McAuliffe (three elections, three losses; nice work)
George Soros ("I gave $27 million, and all I got was… nothing!")
Harold Ickies ("Damn, now I have to carry Hillary's purse again.")
Dan Rather ("I believe Kerry winning Ohio is still accurate")
Markos Moulitsas (0-for-12. Carville you ain't)
The New York Times ("Nobody we know voted for him! You're fired, Brooks!")
The Guardian ("Bloody 'ell!")
Letter writers from The Guardian
Kofi Annan
Mohammed ElBaradei (Better start checking the UN want-ads)
Old Europe
Every Freakin' Idiot Rock Star On The "Vote For Change Tour" (Shut up and sing. Better yet, just shut up)


Wizbang on the state of Democratic party:
They've shot up, broken into and vandalized GOP offices. Kicked people who wore GOP t-shirts and slashed tires of GOP vans. And that was just in the last 48 hours.
They have increasingly lost touch with the needs of the average voter and have been co-opted by the radical left. Where once the Democrats stood for the common man, now they stand against all his values.
But the electoral nightmare is not over for the Democrats. They predicted a large turnout would help them, but instead the good honest people who were (disgusted) by their behavior turned out in even bigger numbers and learned that they are indeed part of the silent majority. These people now got a vivid reminder that they are the majority and their vote counts. A lesson that won't soon be forgotten.

Ace has an amusing buh-bye for John Kerry:
Let's say it together: John Kerry couldn't get elected warden in monkey-prison with a wheelbarrow full of bananas and a lenient policy on flinging feces.

Power Line:
President Bush's reelection is a remarkable victory. He won not only an electoral college majority, he won the popular vote. He won not only the popular vote, he appears to have won an outright majority of the popular vote, something no president has done since 1988. Yet his victory was not only a personal triumph, it was also a triumph of party. Republicans increased their majority in both the House and the Senate.
President Bush won this remarkable victory in the face of a campaign of disinformation the likes of which we have not seen since the heyday of the Big Lie, and in the face of an orgy of hatred ... the likes of which we have not seen in the West since the days of the Nuremberg rallies.

Finally, Mark Davis on his radio program this morning:
I now look forward to not caring about what a strange chick Teresa Heinz Kerry is.

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