As I write this the results of this year’s U.S. election are not yet known. There are reports of long lines to vote, of people voting who haven’t voted before, this all adds up to a sense that this year is historic. Part of it is probably that blogs and the apparatus around them (searches, aggregators, microblogs) are so much more prevalent now that the voices of many different people are coming through in a way far more accessible to those of us who don’t live in the U.S. than they were four years ago.
And so many of those people sound as if they’re convinced that if their side doesn’t win, the U.S. will fall off a cliff and never be able to recover, a view somewhat at odds with the view that the U.S. is a great and robust country. Maybe it’s just electioneering, as some Americans have said to me when I raised the issue, maybe not. In Canada the results of elections make the country veer one way or another, but not change direction radically; there isn’t the fight over who gets to appoint the supreme court judges, for example, that there is in the U.S.
The bit I have found most disconcerting in the whole process, which has been going on for months now, is the demonisation of each side’s supporters, the assumption they’re not intelligent/patriotic/… enough. The level of vitriol hurled around is astounding, not only at the candidates themselves, but at their supporters, and I’ve found myself wondering how the U.S. will cope after this election, when (or whether) the tribes will talk to each other again, how soon they’ll start up again with the preparations for the next contest. One of the few writings I’ve seen that have explained it to me is from Chris Lott; read the comments as well. I guess I tend to live in countries where the politics mostly fall within the realm of what I find reasonable; were I to live in another country, my reactions to the machinery of politics might be different. This election is showcasing the jostling of the federal and the state, the clashing of the world views, and the confrontation of the tribes with the other tribes.