Bin Laden’s Deadly Warning to ‘Red’ States

“Osama bin Laden warned in his October Surprise video that he will be closely monitoring the state-by-state election returns in tomorrow’s presidential race — and will spare any state that votes against President Bush from being attacked, according to a new analysis of his statement.

The respected Middle East Media Research Institute, which monitors and translates Arabic media and Internet sites, said initial translations of a key portion of bin Laden’s video rant to the American people Friday night missed an ostentatious bid by the Saudi-born terror master to divide American voters and tilt the election towards Democratic challenger John Kerry.” (NY Post)

A Quick Guide to Problems at the Poll

I am posting in full an email I received today from TrueMajority.org:

“Don’t Let Problems at the Polls Take Away Your Right to Vote

We’ve read news reports about plans to challenge voters at polling places around the country. Don’t let some political hack deny you your most fundamental right as an American citizen — your right to vote. Below, we’ve created a short guide to protect your rights and advise what to do if someone tries to take them away from you. I encourage you to do two things:

1) Print out this email and take it with you when you go to vote. That way, if you have any trouble, you’ll know what to do — on the spot.

2) Forward this email to everyone you know who might be voting tomorrow. It may make the difference between their voting and not voting.

Hoping you won’t need this,

Andrew Greenblatt

Online Organizer


A QUICK GUIDE TO AVOIDING PROBLEMS AT THE POLLS

Before you go to the polls:

  • Find your correct polling place. Click here: http://www.mypollingplace.com. They are getting crushed with requests, so if you don’t get through right away, try again later or just call your local Board of Elections.
  • To avoid confusion and save time, study the ballot. Check your local newspaper for a copy.
  • Find a form of identification to bring to the polls. Unless you are a first-time voter who registered by mail without sending identification, you have the right to vote without providing ID. However, to avoid hassles just bring ID anyway. A government-issued ID is best (such as a driver’s license), but you can also bring a utility bill, paycheck stub, phone bill, or similar papers with your name on them. If your ID does not have a signature, bring two forms of identification.
  • Allow plenty of time to vote, preferably in the morning. There may be lines. Bring something to read. If the line is really long, consider getting a box of donuts or cookies to share to lighten the mood. Someone might be challenging voters just to slow things up in the hope that long lines will scare away voters. If this is happening, let folks in line know so it stiffens their resolve to stay and cast vote.

Learn your voting rights:

  • Even if you are not on the voter list, federal law gives you the right to a “provisional ballot.” Insist on one and vote. A regular ballot is preferable, so you should do whatever you can to get a regular ballot first, like going home and getting a second form of identification or going to the polling place where you are definitely on the voter list. But rather than be turned away, demand a provisional ballot.
  • You have the right to vote if you are in line when the polls close. Stay in line until you vote.
  • Find out if your employer will give you time off to vote, if necessary.

At the polls:

  • If you are confused about ANYTHING or feel you are being harassed, ask the official poll workers to help. Do not rely on fellow citizens for advice about the ballot, how the voting machines work, or why you are not on the rolls. If someone is challenging your right to vote, ask the poll workers to intervene.
  • If someone harasses you, don’t cause a ruckus. Just ignore the harasser, report it to a poll worker, and let the voting process continue. What kinds of things might somebody try? Well, in the past people have insisted on more ID than is required or argued that someone is at the wrong polling place.
  • If something goes wrong, document it. Write down what happened, when, and descriptions of the people involved, including their names, if you can get them. If you have a camera or camera-phone, take pictures.
  • Report voting problems to an organization ready to respond to problems at the polls:

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  • Common Cause: Call 1-866-MYVOTE1. This is a hotline you can call to report any voting problems.
  • 1-866-OUR-VOTE. This hotline has been set up by a coalition of nonpartisan groups to deal with the most serious problems on Election Day. They have hundreds of lawyers standing by to immediately respond to the most egregious problems. 1-866-OUR-VOTE is the “911” of voter suppression hotlines. Please don’t call unless your problem is serious enough that you have to talk to a lawyer immediately.
  • Contact the media. If something is going terribly wrong at a polling site and you have reported it to the folks above, you might want to then call local radio, television, and newspaper reporters. Often problems clear up quickly after a reporter arrives.

It’s odd that it’s come to this. But given how hard Americans have fought for the freedom to pick our government, it ought to take a lot more than these inconveniences and ham-handed attempts by desperate political operatives to dissuade us from casting a ballot. See you at the polls.”

Burn in hell, Illinois Democrats

“Alan Keyes compared voting for Barack Obama to committing a mortal sin. The Republican Keyes says Obama stands for the destruction of innocent life and against the male-female family. He also said Catholics who vote for the Democratic Obama make themselves part of that evil, just like people in Germany who supported the Nazi Party did.” (KQWC News)

Playing the Nazi card and manipulating credulous Catholics in one fell swoop! It takes the breath away. Sputter on, Keyes, into the obscurity you deserve after your humiliating defeat tomorrow, which will satisfy me perhaps more than any other result tomorrow night save Bush’s defeat.

Open thread: Who else would you single out as someone you are desperately yearning to see go down to defeat at the polls tomorrow?

Redskins’ loss augurs Kerry win

“John Kerry supporters have a welcome omen for their candidate: The Green Bay Packers defeated the Washington Redskins on Sunday.

If history holds, the 28-14 result portends a victory for Kerry on Tuesday because the result of the Redskins’ final home game before the presidential election has always accurately predicted the White House winner. If the Redskins win, the incumbent party wins. If they lose, the incumbent party is ousted.” (ESPN)

Karl Rove in a Corner

“This summer, with the presidential race looking as if it would be every bit as close as the one in 2000, I spent several months examining the narrowest races in Karl Rove’s career to better understand the tendencies and tactics of the man who will arguably have more influence than anyone else over how this election unfolds. Rove has already generated a remarkable body of literature, including several notable books and numerous magazine and newspaper articles. I spoke to many of Rove’s former candidates and their opponents; to his past and present colleagues and the people who faced off against them; and to political insiders and journalists—primarily in Texas and Alabama, where Rove has done the majority of his campaign work. I learned much about Rove that hasn’t made it into the public sphere.

…Clearly, there are many differences between the circumstances in which Rove has been victorious in the past and those he faces now. But that is no reason to discount his record. By any standard he is an extremely talented political strategist whose skill at understanding how to run campaigns and motivate voters would be impressive even if he used no extreme tactics. But he does use them. Anyone who takes an honest look at his history will come away awed by Rove’s power, when challenged, to draw on an animal ferocity that far exceeds the chest-thumping bravado common to professional political operatives. Having studied what happens when Karl Rove is cornered, I came away with two overriding impressions. One was a new appreciation for his mastery of campaigning. The other was astonishment at the degree to which, despite all that’s been written about him, Rove’s fiercest tendencies have been elided in national media coverage.

…He seems to understand—indeed, to count on—the media’s unwillingness or inability, whether from squeamishness, laziness, or professional caution, ever to give a full estimate of him or his work. It is ultimately not just Rove’s skill but his character that allows him to perform on an entirely different plane. Along with remarkable strategic skills, he has both an understanding of the media’s unstated self-limitations and a willingness to fight in territory where conscience forbids most others.

Rove isn’t bracing for a close race. He’s depending on it. ” — Joshua Green (The Atlantic)