Thursday, October 28, 2004

The Country We Carry In Our Hearts Is Waiting


John Kerry In Madison Wisconsin
Originally uploaded by johneaton.
80,000 supporters rallied for John Kerry in Madison Wisconsin. Kerry was introduced by Bruce Springsteen. Springsteen quoted the late Sen. Paul Wellstone -- "The future is for the passionate" -- and he said the time to act is now. "That's why I'm here today to stand alongside Senator Kerry and to tell you that the country we carry in our hearts is waiting." When he was done, Springsteen reached for his guitar and leaned into "No Surrender," the song that opens every Kerry campaign rally.


Report from Salon

Photo from The New York Times

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

Report #3: Kerry in Las Vegas


Kerry in Las Vegas
Originally uploaded by johneaton.
John Kerry came to Las Vegas today to help us get out the vote. Beth was there with 11,000 other supporters. This post from KLAS TV mentions one strategy: "After Senator John Kerry got the crowd fired up at Jaycee Park in Las Vegas, campaign workers kept the momentum going. Direct from the rally, they drove six busloads of voters to early-polling places."

However, there was a much cooler strategy. While the rally was waiting for Kerry to arrive, cell phones were made available for folks to make calls to voters targeted by the get out the vote campaign. Beth and two fellow volunteers made 30 calls before Sheryl Crow performed.

Monday, October 25, 2004

Report #2: Get Thee To A Battleground State

The vote in Nevada is going to be very, very close and will likely be determined by turnout. Whoever turns out the most supporters will win the election. So how are we doing? This afternoon the Las Vegas SUN reported that early voter turnout in Nevada is very heavy. "In Clark, Washoe, Carson City and Douglas counties, with 91 percent of all Nevada voters, 168,703 people had voted through midday Monday. That included 73,538 Democrats and 70,637 Republicans. The rest are nonpartisans or splinter-party members." Democratic turnout is beating Republican turnout by 2,901 votes so far. A really big surprise is that in strongly Republican Washoe County (Reno), Republican voters have turned in 44% of the votes with Democrats right behind at 43% of the early vote total. In Clark County (Las Vegas), Democrats have cast 45% of the votes to the Republicans at 41%.

Furthermore, just today two of Nevada's largest newspapers, the Las Vegas Sun and the Reno Gazette-Journal endorsed Kerry for President. And tomorrow John Kerry will be in Las Vegas. (He spoke to 12,000 supporters in Reno last Friday.)

Cheney and Bush: Damn Scary


Cheney and Bush: Damn Scary
Originally uploaded by johneaton.
The incompetence really is scary. Read today's New York Times article reporting that "The Iraqi interim government has warned the United States and international nuclear inspectors that nearly 380 tons of powerful conventional explosives - used to demolish buildings, make missile warheads and detonate nuclear weapons - are missing from one of Iraq's most sensitive former military installations."

Just as the Bush Administration failed to safeguard the stockpiles of nuclear weapons from the former Soviet Union, we now learn that they failed to safeguard explosives in Iraq. Now these explosives are being used to kill our own troops and civilians in Iraq. Shameful.

Graphic from Salon.com.

Sunday, October 24, 2004

Report From The Front #1: Turning Out The Vote in Nevada

Baptism by fire.

I arrive in Las Vegas late Thursday night and report for duty Friday morning at the offices of MoveOn PAC. (If you need a hit of energy relating to this election, check out any MoveOn PAC office.) Everyone is busy on the phone banks but fortunately for me, a MoveOn PAC dynamo gives me 30 minutes of one-on-one training on door-to-door canvassing. Ready or not, Friday afternoon I am out canvassing for voters in my newly assigned precinct near the airport.

Wow. Las Vegas really is different: Neighborhoods are in flux and folks work strange hours - so who knows when they might be home. Other folks simply won't answer the door. When folks do answer, the most common repsonse is: "they don't live here anymore." Others see no reason to share information - "Yes I already voted. No. It's private."

Nevertheless, I feel like I am making a difference! The goal of MoveOn PAC's Leave No Voter Behind strategy is to "recruit 50,000 volunteers to work in 10,000 key neighborhoods in battleground states to get 440,000 new votes for John Kerry to the polls."

"Hi! My name is John Eaton and I am volunteerting with MoveOn PAC to get out the vote for John Kerry. Have you decided who you are going to vote for?" "Kerry? That's great! Did you know that in Nevada you can vote early? Where? Take a look at my list of early polling places."

Stay tuned! Saturday (October 24), reinforcements start to arrive.

Thursday, October 21, 2004

Making History


Johnny Damon Grand Slam
Originally uploaded by johneaton.
Underdogs can win!

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

Bush Approval Ratings: The Emerging Pattern

Confusing polling data has been coming so fast and furious it has been difficult to see any emerging patterns. However, today The Pew Research Center published a poll showing that approval for George Bush among registered voters has dropped steadily since June and now stands at a dismal 44%. Approval of his handling of the economy stands at just 38% and the Iraq situation at just 37%. Approval ratings are very important because of research that shows that incumbents with approval rates under 50% usually lose.

"A separate Pew Research Center poll of 803 adults shows that Bush's own approval measures have weakened appreciably. Bush's overall job approval stands at 44%, while solid majorities disapprove of his handling of the situation in Iraq (56% disapprove) and the economy (55%)." Check it out!

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

Bush's Hometown Newspaper Endorses Kerry

And with good reason. Last Friday, Doonesbury directed readers to this endorsement from The Lone Star Iconoclast. I recommend you read the whole thing but here is a taste:

"Few Americans would have voted for George W. Bush four years ago if he had promised that, as President, he would:
• Empty the Social Security trust fund by $507 billion to help offset fiscal irresponsibility and at the same time slash Social Security benefits.
• Cut Medicare by 17 percent and reduce veterans’ benefits and military pay.
• Eliminate overtime pay for millions of Americans and raise oil prices by 50 percent.
• Give tax cuts to businesses that sent American jobs overseas, and, in fact, by policy encourage their departure.
• Give away billions of tax dollars in government contracts without competitive bids.
• Involve this country in a deadly and highly questionable war, and
• Take a budget surplus and turn it into the worst deficit in the history of the United States, creating a debt in just four years that will take generations to repay.
These were elements of a hidden agenda that surfaced only after he took office.

The publishers of The Iconoclast endorsed Bush four years ago, based on the things he promised, not on this smoke-screened agenda.
Today, we are endorsing his opponent, John Kerry, based not only on the things that Bush has delivered, but also on the vision of a return to normality that Kerry says our country needs."

Sunday, October 17, 2004

View from the Bay Area


Grand Lake
Originally uploaded by johneaton.
Here is a picture of the marquee of the Grand Lake Theatre in Oakland. That about sums about the feelings around here.

Friday, October 15, 2004

Derrida

This post about the late Jacques Derrida comes from my son Chris who is a Junior at Brown University. "The slew of New York Times articles are both despairing in their anti-intellectualism (that categorizes US politics and media) and inspiring in how much discourse has spiraled out of the first NYTimes obituary. The constant possibility of expanding discourse, as exemplified by the NY Times and theorized by Derrida, is just what this country needs to reinvent itself. Questioning what is given, as well as all other kinds of subversions can and must continue. They should only be limited by the particular (however general) point the discourse makes. Nothing can be taken for granted. No one authority can tell us what is what (is)."

He recommends searching though all New York Times articles containing the word Derrida. Also look at the homage by "Judith Butler (Cal gender theorist and arguably the most important American academic) which contains an unpublished letter to the NYTimes as well as her own remarks on mourning." And he directs our attention to an article by a Brown student "who doesn't define deconstruction but instead enacts it with the coincidence of Christopher Reeves' death the same weekend."

Chris concludes by reminding me that Derrida was the thinker who brought him "beyond the economics of Marx and the implicit philosophy of Nietzsche to real critical thinking and intellectualism. Derrida's thoughts truly bring us beyond the empiricism and imperialism of the West."

Thursday, October 14, 2004

Supporting Kerry in Capri


Kerry.Capri
Originally uploaded by johneaton.
When I was a student traveling in Europe in the summers of 1966 and 1967, it was useful to claim you were Canadian. You know what I mean if you were there. Now, however, it's critical to distance yourself from George W. Bush to get any respect. And so it goes.

Who Are Novelists Voting For?

Check out this site from Slate to see who novelists are voting for this year. You won't be surprised to learn that Kerry is the overwhelming favorite - perhaps because he can read. The best comment, however, comes from A.M. Homes: "Richard Nixon, because I found him so fascinating the first time around I'd be curious to see what he could do from the beyond … ?"

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

News From Abroad

We're back from Italy. We taveled with Kerry buttons prominently displayed and foreigners approached us in surprising numbers. Italians, Brits, Swiss, New Zealanders and Aussies all wanted to talk about the upcoming election. We were struck by the uniform attitude of sympathy for the American people and bewilderment at what has happened to our government. Everyone wanted to know how it could be that someone like George Bush is our President. Everyone wished us luck in defeating Bush. Last Friday on the subway in Rome, we gave our last extra Kerry button to a Brazilian student who begged us for the button and urged us to keep fighting. And Saturday night we had dinner with an Italian family intrigued by the big story in Europe that Bush was wearing a wire during the first debate. Sadly, it would seem that we are all diminished by this President.

Doonesbury

Today's Doonesbury features a link to a shocking email from Wall Street Journal reporter Farnaz Fassih dated September 29, 2004. "What they mean by situation is this: the Iraqi government doesn't  control most Iraqi cities, there are several car bombs going off each day around the country killing and injuring scores of innocent people, the country's roads are becoming impassable and littered by hundreds of
landmines and explosive devices aimed to kill American soldiers, there are assassinations, kidnappings and beheadings. The situation,  basically, means a raging barbaric guerilla war. In four days, 110 people died and over 300 got injured in Baghdad  alone. The numbers are so shocking that the ministry of health -- which was attempting an exercise of public transparency by releasing the numbers -- has now stopped disclosing them." I urge you to read the full report on the disaster in Iraq.

Yesteday's Doonesbury points to a thoughtful letter from the son of President Eisenhower explaining why he will vote for John Kerry over George Bush.

The pattern reveals thoughtful citizens, including lifelong Republicans, turning against Bush.

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