Vote Nov. 2nd
Tomorrow Americans have an important choice to make between two very different visions for the future of our country.
Don’t be fooled: this election isn’t about Democrats or Republicans. Both sides have received at least some endorsements from the opposite party, and newspapers that in the past endorsed the candidate of one party have this year switched sides.
Tomorrow Americans have an important choice to make between two very different visions for the future of our country.
Don’t be fooled: this election isn’t about Democrats or Republicans. Both sides have received at least some endorsements from the opposite party, and newspapers that in the past endorsed the candidate of one party have this year switched sides. Clearly there is something larger at stake here than traditional partisan politics.
Both candidates have used fear appeals and stretched the truth to present their case to the American public. In many cases the debate between the two candidates has left the truth somewhere in between, and key similarities between the candidates are evident: they are both Yale graduates and come from wealthy backgrounds.
But the policy differences between the two candidates could not be more clear, and anyone who has witnessed the events of the last four years must know the importance of this election.
As a wise Saturday morning cartoon character once said, “the power is yours.”