Commentary Oregon Daily Emerald Thursday, November 4, 2004 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 JEN SUD1CK EDITOR IN CHIEF STEVEN R. NEUMAN MANAGING EDITOR JARED PABEN AY1SHA YAUVA NEWS EDITORS PARKER HOWELL SENIOR NEWS REPORTER MORIAH BAUNGIT MEGHANN CUNIFF KARA HANSEN ANTHONY LUCERO CANELA WOOD NEWS REPORTERS CLAYTON JONES SPORTS EDITOR JON ROETMAN SENIOR SPORTS REPORTER STEPHEN MILLER BRIAN SMITH SPORTS REPORTERS RYAN NYBURC PULSE EDITOR NATASHA CHIUNCERIAN SENIOR PULSE REPORTER DAHVI FISCHER AMY LICHTY RYAN MURPHY PULSE REPORTERS DAVID JAGERNAUTH EDITORIAL EDITOR JENNIFER MCBRIDE All.EE SLATER CHUCK SLOTHOWER TRAVIS WILLSE COLUMNISTS ASHLEY GRIFFIN SUPPLEMENT FREELANCE EDITOR GABE BRADLEY NEWS IREELANCE EDITOR/ DIRECTOR OF RECRUITMENT DANIELLE HICKEY PHOTO EDITOR IAUREN WIMER SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER DM BOBOSKY .TIOTOGRAPHER MCOLF. 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Inc., at the University of Ore gon, Eugene, Ore. The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. Bret Furtwancler | Graphic designer ■ In my opinion have taken control of the White Home Herein lies the peril of writing columns about (literally) current events. I wrote a few introductory paragraphs for this space Tliesday night about the difficulty of talking about an almost-resolved election. No candidate had secured victory, and a win seemed eventual for President Bush, but not immediate enough that I’d have to write these replacement paragraphs Wednesday morning. I wrote an analysis of why we could probably safely assume a Bush victo ry sometime after, say, Thursday, even given the quarter million uncounted and provisional ballots. But that’s no longer interesting, let alone prescient. I wrote, too, that 1 couldn’t yet cheer an incoming Kerry administra tion or lament another four years of dubious foreign and economic poli cies. Of course, now I can. On the upside, given the decisive ness of the election, we needn’t dread an upcoming, say, 36 days of partisan cacophonies that would extend an al ready fatiguing electoral season. Fortunately, I dedicated most of what turned out to be a first draft to a few thoughts about other parts of the election: Firstly, repeating a surprise string of victories in 2004, Republicans made even deeper inroads than they did four years ago. While the party’s plat form meshes poorly with Eugene’s lo cal political scene, its message contin ues to resonate with many Americans. Besides a presidential win, the GOP won a net four House seats as of this writing, upping its hold to 231 of the chamber’s 435. It also picked up a net of four Sen ate seats as of this writing, picking up former Democratic seats in Florida, TRAVIS WILLSE RIVALLESS WIT Georgia, Louisiana, South Dakota and both Carolinas, while losing seats only in Colorado and Illinois. The biggest prize of the evening after the presidency was former Representative John Thune’s narrow victory over Senate minority chief Tom Daschle in South Dakota. What explains this behavior for a populace that usually prefers a split in authority between parties? At least part of it can be chalked up to the Democratic message. Democrats plainly settled on a message of “not Bush,” but have failed to express most of their other planks with such clarity. While the Dems’ message is less muddled than it was a year ago (ODE: “Democrats’ demise;” Nov. 2, 2003), the ideological recovery is far from over, as this year’s electoral fig ures suggest. Secondly, Florida is lucky that the vote gap was much larger than polls predicted. (Side note: To that end, CNN Crossfire’s firebrand TUcker Carlson summarized faults in the polling system on the network’s election night blog: “I think the exit polls are insanely inaccurate. They are a joke. They are historically sucky. (Some of them) foretold a trend that did not exist. A series of polls should show a pattern.”) As much as the state might deserve a verbal lashing from the media, Bush’s 375,000-vote lead in the state — about 700 times his lead there in 2000 — should be more than enough to disinterest lawyers and media alike in pursuing the state’s electoral troubles. (Among others: Several officials have cast al legations of votes lost or miscounted by electronic voting machines dur ing recent elections; a Democratic campaign manual in Florida ostensi bly called for volunteers to illegally handle votes; a Democratic state leg islator said she wasn’t given a com plete absentee ballot when she asked for one; Orange County’s touch-screen voting machine system temporarily crashed; most of 60,000 missing absentee ballots trickled late to voters in Broward County just last week, though officials still had to send 15,000 replacements.) Finally, Bush won with a clear plurality of the popular and electoral votes, and so far without the inter vention of the courts. Moreover, he became the first president in 16 years to receive more than 50 per cent of the vote. Critics who have pounded at Bush’s legitimacy be cause he lacked the electoral en dorsement of a majority of the coun try’s voters, or because the Supreme Court ruled for him in Bush v. Gore, will have neither argument at their disposal during his second term. But, like the Bush administration shifting its justifications for interven tion in Iraq, I suspect those critics will scrap together new (albeit prob ably unconvincing) philosophical ammunition for Bush’s legitimacy. traviswillse@ daily emerald, com OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Leters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged, and should be sent to letters@dailyemerald .com or submitted at the Oregon Daily Emerald office EMU Suite 300 Electronic subrnissions are preferred. Letters are limited to 250 words, and guest commentanes to 550 words. Authors are limited to one submission per calendar month Submissions should include phone number and address fortification. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald ■ Editorial Escapists explore new option: Lane Country Now that Kerry has conceded the election, and Bush is officially our president for four more years, many liberals in Eugene are con templating their next move. Republicans con trol every branch of the federal government, in creasing their margins in the Senate and House; they can now easily defeat potential Democratic filibustering on court appointments and, most significantly, the Supreme Court. The changes America will see during this upcoming “Republican Era” promise to be even more dramatic than during Bush’s first four years. The disagreements that are polar izing our country are taking place at a funda mental level, not at the level of bureaucratic nuance. Americans are split down the middle on their world views, priorities and political preferences. And, somehow, the traditional ists, the religionists and the neoconservatives have staged a complete takeover. What is left for progressives to do? One option we’ve heard discussed on cam pus is political escapism. Escapists are those who are so troubled by the results of an election that they flee the influence of their govern ment’s new direction. Left-wing escapists have traditionally moved to Canada while escapists on the right tend to form militias and attempt mini-secessions. If you believe the Democrat’s scare tactics about the return of a draft, Canada might seem like a good option. Canada has cheap drugs, virtually no enemies and superior breeds of comedians. But there are lots of good things about America. For instance, we have amber waves of grain. It seems a shame to move to Canada and throw all that away just because of our disagreements. One of the goals of the American experiment was to find a way for a diverse group of people to live in peace in a large geographic area. But with the population becoming more and more diverse, and the geographic area of this country now much bigger than it was when our forefa thers first conceived of our republic, perhaps we should rethink some of the philosophies that underlie our government. In that vein, the Emerald Board believes it is time for liberals to take a page from the right wing escapist playbook and develop our own progressive militias who will fight for a sover eign nation: Lane Country. If Lane was a coun try, we could really get something done. We could decriminalize gay marriage, marijuana and choice. Let the Texas militias create their lawless, taxless distopia where they arm them selves to the hilt in order to protect their proper ty. Lane Country will have a progressive tax structure, universal health care, livable wages and a clean environment. Yet another possible, and given the current circumstances, entirely logical escapist alterna tive is the creation of a progressive island na tion dubbed “Academia.” We believe a South Seas or Carribean isle near the equator would make an ideal geographic locale for the creation and fostering of a more perfect union based upon progressive ideals. Upon gaining citizen ship, Academians will be issued a hybrid car. You are probably thinking that secession sounds a bit extreme. After four more years of Bush, we think you will be singing a different tune. EDITORIAL BOARD Jennifer Sudick Editor in Chief David Jagemauth Editorial Editor Steven R. Neuman Managing Editor Gabe Bradley Freelance Editor