![]() Mike Laird, 58, who works in retail in Garland County, said he voted for Romney on Monday. "The vast majority of us have seen what it (marijuana) causes and what it does to people," he said. Taylor, who works in sales, said he voted against medical marijuana. He the type of person who gets the facts before he makes a decision," he said. "I like the way he's very assertive, sure of himself. In Hot Springs on Monday, Robert Taylor, 34, said he voted for the president, citing his thoughtfulness. It's just going to take him more time," he said. Robinson said he voted "mostly Republican, except for Obama." "I just think he needs more time to get everything straightened out," he said. Michael Robinson, 47, who is retired from the military and now works as a civilian at the Little Rock Air Force Base, said he voted for President Barack Obama. The way it is now, it's hurting the people in the middle class that are trying to earn a living." Teague said she voted for Republicans in all races. ![]() "I just don't like the way things have been going. "As a police officer, I can't see that going very well," he said.Įrin Teague, 32, who works for a law firm that specializes in debt collection, voted for Romney. ![]() "The last four years haven't gone very well," he said.Ĭhamness said he voted straight Republican, including for U.S. Steve Chamness, 36, a police officer who lives in Cabot, said he voted for Romney. "Our roads need improvement in this state," he said. "He's from an area of the state that I'm from, northeast Arkansas, and he's a prosecutor," he said.īeall, a Republican, said he voted for the highway tax, saying it would improve safety. "Just the way this country has gone the last four years," said Beall, 60, who works in law enforcement.īeall said he voted for Scott Ellington, the Democrats' nominee for Congress. Can we at least have that?Īt Cabot's community center, Charles Beall said Tuesday he voted for GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney. Year 2000 America seems like a veritable Buddha of perfect composure compared to the already-terminally-pissed, stress-crazed populace that has been dragged to the final lap of this terrible contest. ![]() All of this has gone too far, and man, we'd better pray this doesn't end in a 2000-style mess tonight. I think all of us in this business owe America a hug, or something. ![]() As a member of the media, I feel sick about it. They've been whipped into a state of panic – people everywhere are freaking out and muttering to themselves and firing off vitriolic emails. People today on both sides are genuinely terrified of a wrong outcome in this election. We don't believe the other side would have our backs even in an emergency. We should be confident that whoever wins has our collective best interests at heart, even if we don't agree with his or her ideology, the same way we reflexively assume that the pilot of any plane we board doesn't want to fly us into a mountain.īut we don't make that assumption about our politicians anymore. Right? He'll try his best as Commander-in-chief, just like Obama has, and just like Bush did, and Clinton did, and Reagan did and so on. If some foreign agent attacks us, I seriously doubt a president Mitt Romney would wave the white flag and invite the enemy in. When push comes to shove, we all should know most Americans want the same things, but just disagree on how to get there, which is why it should be okay to not panic if the other party wins. ![]()
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