I’d really like to be here at home so I could keep one eye on “The Pit”. See who was gonna’ do themselves in and so forth.
It looks like I’ll be on the road working and incomputercado. In that case I’ll channel-surf on the motel room TV, unless there’s a likely bar nearby that has some pool tables or a band or something. If there’s a good bar available I’ll do the club thing and check out the news on TV the next morning.
I’ll be hoping that Nothing Goes Wrong, and peeking in on things by BBC or CBC.
I may not live in the States, but the fate of where I do live is tied up with that of the States, and there are a number of possible outcomes that would be Not Good by my standards. Chief among these is any result with a lot of uncertainty, and the resulting flood of lawsuits and unrest.
Up until the polls close I’ll be either at the local party headquarters making phone calls, or out canvassing or driving people to the polls. After they close, I’ll probably be glued to a TV somewhere.
Official invite extended…you know I think my mother would love it if a bunch of Dopers showed up to do the election thing with her! She would be so there!
I’m not American, but if possible I’d be glued to the net coverage, hitting F5 frequently. Unfortunately, when the results are coming out I’ll be on a jet 40,000 feet above Asia. Anyone know if Lufthansa gets some kind of satellite news, that kinda thing?
I remember the Al Gore Vs George Bush election being a very fun night in my house because we treated the elction like it was the “Super Bowl”.
This time my mom has already invited people and we are having another election night party.
I already voted by absentee ballot. I’ll be going to work and then hitting up my (future)in-laws house for the night to either celebrate or weep together.
I’m also decidedly avoiding any and all contact with my own (ultra conservative) family until I’m done gloating or less hysterically angry, depending on the outcome of the election, of course.
Mr m and I will be at a friend’s house, celebrating (we hope). They have a dance floor, so I assume there will be some diversion while we wait for the states to change color.
I am also an election judge, so I’ll have a 15 hour day of being a Texas Democrat. I was just griping about this in another thread, but the Republican election judge in my precinct has already invited me to attend her church with her on Sunday. :rolleyes:
I’m planning to be civil and bring pumpkin bread for all my fellow poll workers. There’s a possibility of it being pumpkin bread that was part of a batch offered to Our Dark Lord Satan, but I might be too lazy to bother with that part.
I’m such a nerd that I plan to make my husband tape the *Daily Show * coverage all night so I can watch it later. Then perhaps, years from now, we can show it to our kids and say, “See, kids, this was the night we decided to move to Canada!”
This one’s looking as tight as it was in 2000. Five electoral votes could indeed put it over the top.
This is why New Mexicans have seen so very much of both candidates, their wives, their running mates, and their running mates’ wives in the past few weeks. I’ve gotten so blase about the whole thing that I turned down a ticket to see Kerry (again) last night.
We’ll leave work at 5, go vote for mayor and town council at Town Hall, then go a mile up the road to the firehouse to vote on Federal/state/county races. Then we’ll come home, have dinner, and probably not turn on the TV until 8pm, since the polls don’t close anywhere before then. (Don’t know how much TV coverage I’ll watch even then; I’ll probably follow the returns primarily on the Web.)
I’m thinking Wisconsin will determine how late we have to stay up to find out who will be President three months from now (Kerry wins WI ==> go to bed middlin’; Bush wins WI ==> stay up late).
But either way, I’m planning to stay up until I have an idea who’s going to win the Senate races in OK and CO. If the Presidential race is still up in the air until after the polls close in CO, NM, and NV, then I’ll stay up for that too.
But unlike 2000, I’m NOT planning on staying up until it’s decided.
I’m going to be sitting in the student union building with my laptop, helping to color in states on the map we’re going to put up, despairing for the world, and trying to get my daily NaNoWriMo quota in.
Why, all this time, did I not know that?
You used to live in the US, thought, right?
I just assumed you were an American guy who moved to Dublin for a job (however rarely that happens!)
All I know is that election day itself is very borring. The candidates cant really do anything, they go around to polling places. The media just fills up the time with all these wild ideas that probably wont happen.
Laughing! Ah, you 18+ year old kids, looking so grown up in your Constitutional rights to vote! Us politically active adults under the age of 18 own no responsibility over who wins, loses, or gets pied. So, when the world goes to hell, I will be laughing cause I didn’t cause it. WOOOHOO!
(Also, I will be working Kids Vote polls around 4:30 or something, and voting there. I am 2 months shy of actually working the real polls. As for vanilla, you think your vote won’t affect the outcome? Vote to represent kids who want extra credit across America, then we will talk.)