A big turnout already

And so the day begins. I write this at 9 a.m., having just cast my vote (along with my wife, who did so for the first time), having waited about 25 minutes — the first time in my 29 years of voting that I've had to stand in line.

My neighbor, a Democratic poll worker, said she got to the Community Center, where four districts cast ballots, at 6 and the were about 40 people standing in line outside. She also said that about 150 people had voted in two and a half hours in District 5 — a huge turnout (some years, she said, there are 150 voters all day).

I think we're in for a long night.

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Unexpected endorsement

http://widgets.clearspring.com/o/48bda4baaf82f1d1/490fc9fbda4f57f4/48bda4baaf82f1d1/64b4f29a/-cpid/d53dc332f7bcae0eBoston Legal, which always has worn its liberal politics on its sleeves, made an overt endorsement of Barack Obama during tonight’s episode, going beyond its usual political pontificating during trial scenes to present the conservative wack-job, Denny Crain (William Shatner), changing his mind and voting for Barack Obama. His reason: He was usnure of what the right choice was, he said, but “after these last eight years, I knew the wrong choice.”

I’m hoping that there are a lot of people out there that ultimately follow his lead.

The final 24 hours (or so)

It is difficult to believe that, after nearly two seemingly endless years, this electoral free-for-all is finally coming to a close. The polls have Barack Obama up, cracking 50 percent almost across the board, with the sputtering McCain campaign likely to lose in recent Republican strongholds as Virginia and Ohio.

And yet, there is much consternation among Obama supporters, like my friend Bill, who has been riding the Obama bandwagon since it left the garage back in the day. Here is what he wrote me today:

Why do I feel that Obama’s situation is like that old plate spinning from the old 50’s TV shows, if he can keep them spinning until election day (5-8 points up) then he gets an electoral landslide, but if he doesn’t …..

Or this mixture of hope and despair from Pierre Tristam, of the Daytona News-Journal:

But there’s still Tuesday. Whatever the polls say, I’ve spent the last three months lurching between hope and despair, usually a few dozen times a day. I can’t help it. I’ve always taken presidential elections personally, because whoever is president disproportionately defines the nation’s identity, and therefore mine as an American. It’s an identity I cherish more protectively than whatever is left of my ancestry or the family and creed I was born into, which were never a choice.

Being an American is, and proudly so, though for too many of the last 30 years the blare of conceit and belligerence, the offensive divide between “worthy” and “unworthy,” “loyal” and “disloyal,” even “legal” and “illegal,” made pride in this country more difficult, and certainly less just, than it should be. It’s different this time. The belligerence is receding. The noise is dying. The pride isn’t — pride in a country that could produce a candidate as radically at variance with the nation’s tainted history yet as perfectly representative, as perfectly American, as Barack Obama. An America so divided couldn’t have pulled it off.

An America on the mend very much could, because it’s what the country at its best has managed to do. This is the America of my dreams. On Tuesday, I hope that it’ll be no fantasy. I despair that somehow, it may yet be.

It’s been a long time in the desert for progressives. An Obama victory doesn’t guarantee our coming home, but at last it gives us a chance to — maybe — sit at the table.

Squirrelly art

We were at Home Goods looking for some pictures for above our TV in the den when we came across this squirrel print. Suffice to say that, given my squirrel phobia, we didn't get this one. (Forget that it's ugly — it's a squirrel!)

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