1) Congratulations, Mr. President and Madam Vice President
Conversation
8) But objections were held in check by the vast majority of the country.
In 2000, Vice President Al Gore successfully convinced the senate to certify his own electoral loss.
In 2008, John McCain faced down a crowd of booing fans to congratulate Obama.
youtube.com/watch?v=v5Mba8
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9) At the time, those events felt isolated, and the losers' responses reassuring.
Perhaps we be more worried when the cracks begin to show.
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10) I don't know whether 2000 was the beginning, or 2008 was, but by 2012 it was undeniable.
Trump--at that point mostly an afterthought--ran on a platform of pretending Obama wasn't born in the US (remember that?).
Democrats saw Republicans as sowing lies and discontent.
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12) Weinstein fell, and no one shed any tears for him: the story was pretty damning.
But many felt like there was a motte-and-baily beginning to envelope culture: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motte-and.
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25) And, to top it off, the president (at the time) of the United States of America attempting to overturn an election he lost.
There were a ton of things at stake, but I guess at some point many people were single issue voters.
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