Tuesday, January 19, 2021

Election Thoughts on the Eve of the Inauguration

Since conservative concerns over election irregularities were dismissed and ignored by liberals and leftists, the best case scenario election map will forever remain like this to conservatives. The election and inauguration of Biden was on the surface fully legal, but the irregularities of governors and secretaries of state arbitrarily changing election practice without the consent of the legislature in the name of the pandemic was a serious breach of law that was clearly done to favor one candidate, will never be forgotten, and should never be repeated (by either party).

Some claim Biden won by a landslide. Shyea. If these maps from 270towin.com (link) are accurate, then clearly we've had some electoral college landslides in our past, but Biden wasn't one of them.

Remember for the next 4 hours, 4 days, 4 weeks, 4 months, and 4 years that the final numbers, whether we believe them or not, show Joe Biden won the popular vote by a lackluster 4%. It's not like he won 90-10. He won 51-46. He didn't even win by double digits. And Leftists in the Democratic party are calling for sweeping reform, including political and literal destruction of Republicans. Hmm. That rhetoric would smell like a totalitarian rule. And for all you Trump haters, he just proved you wrong when you called him a dictator, by peacefully relinquishing power. Fascist dictators don't get censored by their own people, and don't hand over power. (As the Babylon Bee pointed out, here.) You were wrong about Trump, we'll see how long it takes you to realize how horribly wrong you were about Biden and Harris.

Here were the supposed popular results:
  • Biden: 81,284,778 (51.27%)
  • Trump: 74,224,501 (46.82%)
Difference: 4.45% (7.06M votes). While Biden supposedly won by 4% overall, that includes the overkill votes in silicon valley, Chicago, and New York. Eight states were decided by even less:
  • Georgia:  0.24%  of 5M voters = 11,779 margin (B)
  • Arizona:  0.31%  of 3.4M = 10,457 (B)
  • Wisconsin:  0.63%  of 3.3M = 20,682 (B)
  • Pennsylvania:  1.18%  of 7M = 82,155 (B)
  • North Carolina:  1.35%  of 5.5M = 74,481 (T)
  • Nevada:  2.39%  of 1.4M = 33,596 (B)
  • Michigan:  2.78%  of 5.5M = 154,188 (B)
  • Florida:  3.35%  of 11.1M = 371,686 (T)
In this moment I'm not complaining about the narrow state margins, the suspected fraud, nor the Republican loss. I am simply pointing out that a win of a lousy 4% is not justification for Democratic party leaders and their media friends to be calling for the eradication and demonization of the losing party. For example:
Let us not forget that career politicians who look more for their own personal political gain than for the good of their constituents are our greatest problem in Washington, DC. Lastly, even though I fear Republicans will always disappoint me and Democrats will always anger me, don't forget what each party self describes they stand for, because they vote aligned with these platforms more often than not: