Wednesday, November 06, 2024
2025
“Beings are owners of their actions, heirs of their actions; they originate from their actions, have their actions as their refuge.”
Majjima Nikaya,
Buddhist teaching
There is nothing about this election I understand, except its very dire consequences.
I guess I'm not alone in this. Half the country seems to be having a nervous breakdown today.
For me, I realize that this hasn't been the world I've known for some time, but now it is a truly alien country.
America is in disgrace today. Our system has failed, beginning with the judiciary, that sent hundreds to jail for the January 6, 2021 insurrection, but failed to bring its leader to justice. The result is we have a man who was impeached twice for high crimes and misdemeanors, who is guilty of 34 felonies and charged with what amounts to multiple treasonous acts, handed fateful power again. Now everyone is endangered (except perhaps a few billionaires), including the selfish saps who voted for Chaos.
2025 was always shaping up to be a fateful year. For the international effort to address the climate crisis through the Paris Agreements, 2025 is a benchmark year. Several targets for that year are almost certainly going to be missed. Needless to say, the new US government will officially not care. Meanwhile the emission of the main greenhouse gases reached record levels in 2023, after one of the highest one year increases from 2022 despite international commitments to lower emissions.
In all the campaign fuss, a few relevant news items were obscured, such as the latest UN climate conference which called for "no more hot air" instead of action, and a "quantum leap in ambition" if the goals of limiting greenhouse gases sufficiently is to be attained.
And the story that half a million people around the world were killed since 2004 in natural disasters made worse by climate distortion--more deaths than caused by wars, terrorism and malnutrition combined. The predicted expansion of formerly tropical diseases has also begun, with outbreaks of malaria, cholera and dengue in new regions.
Now of course we've elected to have multiple other very dangerous crises and soon. Perhaps even before the US commits economic suicide with global consequences, we've learned that Russia is enlisting North Korean troops to fight Ukraine, coupled with the kowtowing to Putin by Musk and of course Chaos himself, threatening Ukraine's existence, the western alliance and eventually the sovereignty of the United States.
I could go on but who's listening? I haven't slept since Monday night. Every time I started to fall asleep, another terrible consequence would attack me.
On November 6 the sun came up on the beginning of a very different world, for everyone. And really really really, not in a good way.
Tuesday, November 05, 2024
Numbers V. The Vibe
The day has come. My impression of it as the voting begins is the stark difference between the so-called numbers and the vibe.
The numbers people, the data people, parse what they continue to call an extremely close race. Ace NYT numbers guy Nate Cohn worries aloud that the polls may underestimate Chaos again, and ace NYT numbers guy Nate Silver sees the Chaos shadow everywhere. No momentum for Kamala, a dour razor thin election.
But out there on the campaign trail for the past week or more the contrast has been almost mythic. The Harris campaign is exuberant, expansive, joyful. She sounds like a winning candidate talking to the electorate that will soon be her constituency. Chaos sounded broken, dazed and depressed. She sounds like a winner. He sounded like a loser.
The Harris campaign, fusing Democrats, Republicans and the unaffiliated, is unified. The federal and state Republican organizations are detached, the Chaos campaign itself is riven with public infighting.
The momentum has been visible, palpable. Kamala Harris drew ever-increasing crowds. Huge crowds everywhere--20,000 was not unusual. 75,000 in Washington. The sprawling crowd for her last event in Philadelphia may have been upwards of 30,000. The last Chaos rallies showed empty seats, people leaving.
The numbers people say it's a tossup. The vibe says that America is finally done with him.
To be sure, there's plenty of good news in the numbers for Harris. The final Marist poll puts her national numbers at 51% to Chaos 47%, which has been the number that has sounded right to me this week. (Reading between the lines, I think the Harris campaign is figuring on a 50/48% split.) The NYT & some other big polls are tied nationally, and the swing states very close. But even in the NYT poll, Harris is ahead in more of those states. The same in other polls, though it's not always the same states. Then there's that surprising Iowa poll with Harris ahead there, which may suggest layers and movement that other polls aren't picking up.
And there are the other numbers: the number of Harris staff and volunteers, the number of calls they're making and doors they're knocking on, vs. the conspicuous absence of Chaos workers. A superior get out the vote effort is worth at least half a percentage point, they say. Once again, these numbers suggest the vibe--the enthusiasm that is motivating, that could create the bandwagon effect of an obviously winning campaign.
And it seems that nobody but maybe Nate Siler and Nate Cohn believe Chaos will win. Observers as different as Michael Moore and Bill Kristol not only foresee a Harris victory, but one that will be clear by midnight tonight, though a lot of votes will likely still be uncounted.
What to expect? The first crucial results will probably be Georgia and North Carolina, either or both of which are expected to have definitive results by say 9 or 10 p. EST. If Harris wins one, the most direct path to victory for Chaos has been severed, and it's time to put the champagne in the fridge. If she wins them both, then something big is happening.
Michigan and Wisconsin may also report enough votes by say 11 p. to show the shape of votes to come. If she wins those as well as Georgia and North Carolina, it's time to to pop the cork. If she has won one, then it may take awhile for her to officially get the two votes she needs.
If results are mixed, then the wait for Pennsylvania returns, which could be late Wednesday or Thursday. Nevada and Arizona could take a week or even two to complete their count. Any or all of them could be projected by the networks before the night is out. But if margins are truly razor thin, the suspense will continue past the weekend.
But the vibe says no. It says that women--including a healthy minority of Republican women, a plurality of unaffiliated women, have not forgotten the abortion bans. It says that young voters are excited, Black and Latino voters are motivated, older voters are disgusted with and alarmed by Chaos, so they will turn out to vote for Harris. It says that many former Chaos voters may be like Chaos campaign staffers who would be glad if he just goes away. They may stay home. At his last events, it was clear that if Chaos was trying to appeal to anyone, it was right wing conspiracy fringe.
The vibe says Texas and Florida may not be out of reach. And yes, Iowa. It says that the Dems may squeak out a Senate and House majority.
Even some of the numbers people suggest that the polls aren't picking up late registrants, their models might not work anymore anyway, and in an election with a coalition of Ds and Rs (and a Generation Z that prefers to register unaffiliated), how people will actually vote based on registration is even more unpredictable than usual. The vibe says that even if the numbers are even, there are enough ways to "overperform" them to win.
The vibes were all on display on Monday night. They say President Harris.
If you haven't voted, vote. Be grateful you experienced the Harris campaign. Soon we learn our fate. Let's hope the vibes are right. Because what's at stake is the future. Possibly all of it.