Well I saw Jubilee! with my friends and GF in Vegas, awesome seats ('cause I know how to kiss ass on a ticket sales person, that's why. P.S. Tipping helps! Really. People can be bought, and usually pretty cheaply.) and it was fantastic. Really one of the best shows I've seen in years. Snoop Dogg sucked, just a parody of himself anymore. Eryka Badu was good as usual, but kinda flat, she needs to start exploring some new directions. This DJ from Sweden was as good as DJ gets without being Paul Oakenfold circa 1999, Further was kinda of tired, slow, sloppy changes, but that was the first of three nights and they should pick it up (cause they can't sound any worse, can they?).
My day and a half with Metallica (and Lou Reed, and Marianne Faithful (yeah, her) and some of the guys from King Diamond and Anthrax, Mike Judge of Bevis and Butthead and all sorts of 'don't you know who I am!' types1) would require it's own post, it's pretty funny really. Sad too.
I'm doing Tedeschi Trucks Band tonight. She's a kick ass blues guitar player, excellent singer who's family name is associated with a small chain of grocery stores on the East Coast, and he's the guitar phoneme, nephew of Butch Trucks, original percussion player for the Allman Brothers, so that's his story. They met, fell in love (she's a bit older) and now they play together. That's my NYE.
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But see...
We don't have a national political system. Its' the United States, and the states have a huge power when it comes to elections, and, at that - there is NO national election for any national office. Unless you count American Idol. Elections for President are really not for the office, but for electors on some formula derived by the state itself (so it's not universal, some apportion, some are winner take all) who meet later and actually vote the joker in. The states could just go ahead and appoint electors, or have their state senate do it. They used to. Direct election of US senators is only pretty recent as the nation goes.
And we don't have 'hung Parliament' - hell if we got those guys hangin' we'd never let them down - but we have (and apparently LOVE) divided government where the executive and the legislative are split to different parties. Or the House from the Senate. Or the states from the Feds. Or some wacky combination of all of the above like the one we currently have going on, and under that many of the state governments are further split executive/legislative and house and senate. Obviously (and its sure a lot easier to see this looking in, than from the inside out) we DON'T MUCH LIKE OR TRUST EITHER PARTY. Hence the constant pitting.
There is also something else that is really driving it. Demographics. People move, in the US people move a lot. Tons. Far more than other nations. And there have always been some pretty sharp reasons for moving from one place to another. Opportunity, new job, a job, a promotion, school - all that stuff. And people have moved because of the weather, or the climate. But over the last 20 years lots, and lots, and lots of people have moved because of the social climate/scene. There were always people moving for 'lifestyle' kinds of reasons since the 1900s, but since the 60s more and more people are choosing a place to live based on that, and the kind of people those places attract. And it seems to be working across the board as more liberal areas gain more and more liberal minded people, and as conservative places attract people who are attracted to that kind of society. That's what the real red/blue split in the US is really all about, and it's it's only going to get deeper and deeper that way. California and New York are going to continue to get more progressive, and Iowa looks more and more like A Handmaiden's Tale every year.
And the names of the parties don't change, but the policies do. The Democrats have basically become what the East Coast Republicans always were. The Republicans moved so far to the right to get out of their way that they are in danger of falling off the political map and becoming something else, and it's about time.
1. I used to love to say "I'm the janitor, am I supposed to?" which would always set them back a second before they decided that they were OK with me NOT knowing them. Sean Penn is the only guy who never tripped up on that one. Now I just look at 'em real hard and say, "Nope, do I get a hint?".