Let\'s see here, ok, in order:
Melbourne:
Well there is something called the electoral college, that kind of makes the whole popular vote thing all pointless.
You\'re correct to a degree. The electoral college does the voting, but they (generally) listen to the popular vote in their district. Also, there are MANY other offices that the popular vote does directly affect (senate, representitives, governer, and countless other smaller state and regional offices and mandates).
Adeli: I looked at what both candidates stood for, and I chose the one who agreed with me on more policies than the other. Bush is Pro-Life, he doesn\'t want the government to fund stem cell research, he doesn\'t support gay marriage, and I felt his response to 9/11 as well as his war against Saddam\'s regime were both adequate.
Hatchnet: I completely agree.
Icefalcon: You\'re correct to a degree. Newspapers tend to lean republican (I\'m talking generally here, stereotypically) and TV news, etc. tend to lean democratic. However, both types of media distort so much it is hardly believable. I do, however, completely agree that as far as qualification for running the country Bush definitely had the advantage. The fact that Kerry couldn\'t make up his mind (at least at the beginning of the campaign, before they brought in that crack campaigner guy, name slips my mind) worried me alot.
Shadowfax: Oh boy. We\'ve already been over how the IQ stats are completely skewed in that they only take a very small sampling of the population among one particular age group in a way that can\'t even be used to calculate an IQ (ACT and SAT were not designed to calculate a person\'s IQ, that\'s what IQ tests are for). As for the rest of what you said, it\'s hard to disagree with alot of it because all you gave were general statements. You gave little or no reason to back it up, and therefore strike me as the kid who sits in front of the TV all day and occasionally catches some news (which immediately becomes truth, because after all, it\'s the news, and it\'s on TV).
I think people voted for Bush because they think he actually did something in response to 911 and terrorism when he attacked the wrong country and payed with many lives.
Perfect example of a general statement with no back up.With the information he received I think he made the right decisions. Remember, hindsight is always 20/20. Foresight is often nearsighted (with good reason). The Taliban had already presented itself as a threat (world trade center bombings, which Clinton did nothing about, and 9/11) so it was not the wrong group to commence military action on. They killed innocent Americans and therefore had it coming. As for Iraq, he was told there was a threat, and he did a pre-emptive strike to avoid anything bad. What if he hadn\'t, and terrorists aided by Saddam had attacked a large target like the Taliban did on 9/11. Wouldn\'t there be more of this \"the president was warned and did nothing\" talk going around? Yes! In addition to this, Saddam needed to be gone. He was killing his own people. If you don\'t care about the people that died under his orders then you are just cold hearted.
Lastly, the men and women who enlist in the military know that they may be called to another country to fight, and that they may die. If they don\'t want to do this, then they won\'t sign up! People in the military overwhelmingly support Bush, and that says a lot for me (because of my overwhelming respect for those in uniform).
sashok20: What a terribly dumb reason to vote for anyone (nothing personal, it\'s just a dumb reason).
Arf, this is really long, sorry, I\'m done now.
:emerald: