I wasn't online yesterday because I was doing live election coverage all night long for a class blog that I run. Looking back, I can see the tone of my writing start to change around 10:00 p.m., as I grew more weary and the outcome grew more inevitable.
Looks like half the country is eagerly anticipating gas prices in the $4-5/gallon range, unemployment climbing past 10%, and several trillion more dollars added to the national debt over the next four years. The other half of the country is considering moving to Belize.
Unless, of course, Obama replicates what Clinton did in his second term and actually moves toward bipartisanship in order to get things done. Given Obama's track record, though, I'm not expecting much.
It's absolutely astonishing that anyone could get reelected after
1) holding the unemployment rate above 8% for the majority of his presidency,
2) adding several trillion to the already sky-high national debt,
3) doubling gas prices,
4) literally watching a U.S. ambassador die live on closed-circuit television while refusing troops' pleas to let them go and save lives, and
5) explicitly insulting voters in the key states of Ohio and Pennsylvania -- both of which he
won -- by saying that they just inexplicably "cling to guns or religion,"
then putting them at the same level of illogic as blind xenophobia.
I guess that just shows how ill-advised the Romney campaign was. As soon as he won the first debate, Romney backed off the attack and passed up an array of opportunities to attack Obama. He clearly thought he could just let the clock run out and hold a tiny victory, totally forgetting that anything can happen in the final week of the campaign. This is an election that he should have won, and it's a campaign cycle in which the Republicans should have at least tightened the margin in the Senate. Instead, well, you know what happened.
Looking at the polls, Obama turned the corner in the last week, largely due to the Sandy catastrophe. I'd say there was a shift of roughly 1.5% in the polls during that timeframe. If you gave that margin back to Romney, then looking at how many nail-biter states there were, the Republican would be our next president. But that's just not how politics works. His staff failed to realize that you can't just rest on your laurels if you hope to unseat an incumbent.
Ugh. If I'm able to earn any sizable chunk of money in the near future, I'm planning to invest at least a portion of it overseas. The U.S. economy is no longer trustworthy enough for me to trust everything to domestic markets.
On a side note,
CNN still hasn't called Florida. Are they really still that scared after 2000? I mean, even I decided to call it for Obama at 2:00 a.m., just a couple of minutes after his acceptance speech ended.