How Are Bush Supporters Treated In Blue Country?

From here:

In Los Angeles' gentrifying-as-fast-as-we-can Hipstervill—aka the Silverlake/Los Feliz area on the city's eastside—there are more coffeehouses and alternative bookstores than churches. Here, aging, unemployed bohemians with long, matted hair, tinted sunglasses, and affectedly dour expressions skulk along the midafternoon streets as though they have just rolled out of bed. (They probably have.)

Dressed to impress in my Bush-Cheney T-shirt, tote bag, and "W." button, I first stop at Silverlake's Über-cafe, the Coffee Table. "The Table," as it is known, is the daytime HQ for the area's writing community—the bed-headed brigades of aspiring indie auteurs who hunch over their laptops, whispering pitches back and forth like state secrets. I stand in line for a soda; my T-shirt first makes contact with the locals as the server, a rather prim-looking Asian-American man, double-takes at my unabashedly partisan display, his smile freezing into a look I can only describe as bracing for me to pull out an assault weapon and open fire. I order, pay, and walk with my Diet Coke through the restaurant, taking a seat on the patio that puts me and my garb on prominent display for the 20 or so patrons. A wave of distressed glances ripples in my direction, but I remain unmolested. Yet as I finish my soda, two hipsters saunter past. One of them, untucked shirt hanging over his jeans, gapes at my shirt and mutters, "Asshole," only slightly under his breath.

Next up: Café Tropical, the gritty Cuban coffee house in old Silverlake. I park my Bush-Cheney festooned car behind a Volvo station wagon decorated with a bumper sticker that reads, "Ban war without end. Not in our name." I order an iced espresso and sit beneath a collage of Che Guevara photos. Customers accessorize their coffees at the condiment station in front of me. Suddenly I look up to see Latino man, who appears to be in his early 40s, rushing toward me, an enormous grin on his face. "Where do you get that shirt?" he demands. He continues: "I know only three Republicans here. Everyone else loves Kerry. The Spanish language TV is so filled with bias. They don't tell you that Mr. Bush is a gentleman." People standing nearby watch our summit with anguished there-goes-the-neighborhood expressions. As my new friend leaves, he stands at the front door and, raising his fist, yells, "Viva Bush!" Spasms of horror seize the store and pulse out to the community beyond.

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Article Author: RJ Elliott

RJ Elliott is a three-time graduate of the University of Central Florida. His passions in life are sports, politics, and nature. He dislikes daytime television, anti-American dictators, and people who talk like Garrison Keillor. …

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  • 1 - bhw

    Oct 25, 2004 at 11:04 pm

    My friend's father was threatened by a passerby in a car for putting a Kerry/Edwards sign on his own front lawn.

    We can go back and forth with these stories all day. The political climate in this country is pretty wild right now, and you can't really assign the role of bad guy to just the Democrats, as much I know you'd like to. Assholes exist on both sides of the political spectrum.

  • 2 - curt

    Oct 26, 2004 at 12:01 am

    bhw -

    will rj be able to grasp such calm, rational common sense?

  • 3 - Roscoe

    Oct 26, 2004 at 3:38 am

    OH GOODY Anecdotal testimony.

  • 4 - Al Barger

    Oct 26, 2004 at 3:46 am

    Yes, lots and lots and lots of anecdotal testimony about the thuggish ill behavior in this election season, mostly by Democrats.

    Of course, you get enough anecdotal evidence, and you start seeing significant recurring patterns and statistics and such.

  • 5 - Winston Smith

    Oct 26, 2004 at 5:49 am

    How could this divisive atmosphere have come about?????

    Let's ask Sean Hannity...he might know...

  • 6 - andy marsh

    Oct 26, 2004 at 6:53 am

    RJ...I thought it was a great story...I smiled the whole time I was reading it!

    I will share this with you. Last week, as I was leaving work, I noticed that I could not get in the drivers side door of my PICK-UP truck. The reason, a Lexus with a kerry/edwards sticker was a foot over the line into my parking space. I was kind enough to leave a note informing the driver that their parking skills were actually a little better than their skill at picking a presidential candidate! And how much I appreciated having to slide into my PICK UP truck in the rain from the wrong side.

    I figured I'd share the fact that I drive a pick up...I like to think that I fit into that stereotype that I've been placed in since I started putting in my 2 cents.

  • 7 - JR

    Oct 26, 2004 at 9:47 am

    No, we can't all just get along. The U.S. should just divide up into two independent nations. Why should either side have to compromise its values?

  • 8 - Rodney Welch

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:00 am

    Was the above supposed to be some kind of horror story? It's not. Anytime you wear a shirt or have a bumpersticker declaring some kind of political preference people who don't agree are going to take as at least some kind of an affront, aren't they? The best you can hope for is not to be physically assaulted, which he wasn't. And you can easily find as much on one side as the other; just wear a Kerry-Edwards shirt to a Chamber of Commerce function in Columbia, S.C. if you don't believe me. And look at Andy Marsh -- he responds to this story by stating how he went out of his way to offend a Kerry supporter. (Love the fact that he thinks he was being kind.)

  • 9 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:04 am

    anecdotal testimony about the thuggish ill behavior in this election season, mostly by Democrats.

    it's amazing how people can convince themselve of stuff like this.

    people have showed up a bush rallies and been arrested for doing nothing other than wearing the wrong shirt.

    heck, an elderly woman was carried off in her chair in new hampshire.

    gee, i wonder if any of the gop organizations will hire people to jam dem get out the vote phone banks (like a couple of years ago).

  • 10 - andy marsh

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:10 am

    Actually Rodney, I was pointing out how "kind" the kerry/edwards supporter was to me for parking her lexus a foot over the line into the parking spot that I was already in and making it so I couldn't get into my vehicle.

    The fact that this "person" who obviously can't park in a straight in parking lot, also can't figure out who should be running this country was very ironic to me.

  • 11 - Shark

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:16 am

    Nice bit of plagiarism disguised as an original essay, RJ.

    And Big Al's "...lots of anecdotal testimony about the thuggish ill behavior in this election season, mostly by Democrats..." almost brought a tear to my eye.

    PS: In comtemporary Amerika, "liberal" will soon replace "Jew!" And just wait until the GOP starts with the post-election "de-lousing centers" for the "intellectual elite."

    Gotta run! I'm off to my mandatory "Creationism" class!



  • 12 - andy marsh

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:25 am

    de lousing centers sounds like a good idea...

    As far as creationism being taught in schools...why shouldn't it be? it's a theory, just like Darwins THEORY of evolution...just a thought.

    I was taught both, were you?

  • 13 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:30 am

    theory: A set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena.

    "just a theory", i love that one.

  • 14 - Shark

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:35 am

    re: Creationism Wish-Fantasy -vs- Darwin's Theory of Evolution

    ANDY: "I was taught both, were you?"

    I dropped out of Bible Study when I realized that no dinosaurs were mentioned.

  • 15 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:37 am

    best snl weekend update joke in years:

    This week, Georgia’s board of education approved a plan that allows teachers to keep using the word "Evolution" when teaching biology. Though, as a compromise, dinosaurs are now called "Jesus Horses."

  • 16 - andy marsh

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:42 am

    so shark...you spit on something you have no knowledge of?

    I guess that's the difference in parochial schools and public schools...where I went to school we were taught both theories and actually encouraged to think!

    Here's a couple more definitions of the word theory for you

    Abstract reasoning; speculation

    A belief or principle that guides action or assists comprehension or judgment.

    An assumption based on limited information or knowledge; a conjecture.

    All of which fit both Darwin and creationism...because you weren't there and neither was Darwin.

  • 17 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:43 am

    and by the way, i was taught creationism in school. catholic school.

    but the same nun who tought this stuff to me also showed us a little plastic container which supposedly contained a sliver of jesus' cross.

    the first seed of doubt was planted in my third grade mind.

  • 18 - JR

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:47 am

    andy marsh: I was taught both, were you?

    Why stop at Creationism? If you're so open minded, why not learn every crackpot superstition ever dreamed up by ignorant savages?

  • 19 - Shark

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:49 am

    ANDY: "...so shark...you spit on something you have no knowledge of?"

    Andy, I have more knowledge in my big toe than you've exhibited in a month of mindless posts on Blogcritics.

  • 20 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:52 am

    i have no problem with creationism being taught in school....if it's part of a comparative religious studies course, christianity, islam, hinduism, buddhism, paganism.

    all by itself? not with my money.

  • 21 - andy marsh

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:56 am

    I haven't been here for a month!

  • 22 - Distorted Angel

    Oct 26, 2004 at 10:58 am

    Andy, I'm pretty sure that Christians don't consider creationism to be a theory.

  • 23 - Shark

    Oct 26, 2004 at 11:00 am

    Andy: "I haven't been here for a month!"

    My apologies. Time crawls when you're doing the typing.


  • 24 - Rodney Welch

    Oct 26, 2004 at 11:17 am

    Andy -- There's no irony. Obviously, the person who can't park straight does know who to vote for; if she has a bumpersticker, apparently she isn't confused about the matter.

    And Mark makes an EXCELLENT point about Bush rallies. If Al Barger wants to take his right-leaning blinders off, he'll see that those Bush people don't mess around when it comes to bitch-slapping the loyal opposition at every opportunity. "Mostly by Democrats" my ass.

  • 25 - bhw

    Oct 26, 2004 at 11:21 am

    This thread is a scream. I'm crying over here.

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