Today is election day in the United States, so I’m posting this special edition of Junkyard Wisdom™. See what I did there? It’s a “special edition” like it’s a news show we’re going to be bombarded with for the next few days! Ha!
Anyway, I read something well worth sharing.
Axios has become my go-to news source. I get the morning and evening emails to keep me up to date. On Sunday they posted something that should make all of us pause, reflect, and prepare. I’m going to re-post it here because I think it’s important.
For now, be sure you vote. Keep your loud opinions out of social media because they tend to sound rude. Embrace the person you cannot stand. Take a deep breath. Eat a donut.
And remember, as Mike Allen of Axios says in the piece below, “All we can do is be smart about what’s to come, and wise in our responses.”
Here’s the Axios piece:
We all need to be clear-eyed about the social and political volatility heading into Election Day:
- The chances of sporadic violence, significant unrest or voting issues are quite high, according to basically every federal and state official monitoring voting and its aftermath in 2020.
But all of us — Democrats, Republicans, independents alike — can do our part to minimize the drama and darker scenarios, Axios CEO Jim Vandehei writes:
1. Vote and then chill until late Tuesday night. There’ll be dumb rumors, wild speculation and armchair projections, all of it meaningless.
- There’s no chance you have even a clue who wins until Florida, Georgia and North Carolina are counted and reported.
- More likely, you will need to wait for clear-cut results in Pennsylvania, where it will take days to count all mail-in votes.
2. Don’t expect a quick, clear winner: We can’t stress enough the chance of it taking days to fully count mail-in and absentee votes, to determine the real outcome in places like Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
- Be patient: COVID and the mail-in torrent make this election unlike any other.
3. Brace for the possibility of a “Red Mirage.” We first told you about this term, coined by the Democratic data firm Hawkfish, on “Axios on HBO” before Labor Day:
- Because polling and modeling shows Republicans are more likely to vote in person and Democrats are more likely to vote by mail, early counts could look heavier for the GOP than the final result, when absentee votes are all counted.
- So the trends could look more Trump-friendly than the final outcome. This is not a partisan belief; it’s a simple fact. (See the full “Red Mirage” segment.)
4. Don’t share social-media posts that aren’t from a source you trust and know well. Period. Too many people share too much garbage too often.
- Only pay attention to sources of information you trust and can validate with 100% certainty. Measure twice, tweet once (or, better yet, never).
5. Don’t overreact. You might see images on cable or social media of protests, or what seem like massive voter intimidation or issues. This can often seem bigger or more widespread than it is.
- Top officials tell us they fear Russia or other actors plan to amplify even the smallest issues to sow chaos. So don’t assume the worst.
6. Expect that President Trump may refuse to accept results, if he loses.
- Why? Because he has told us he will fight the voting rules and results all the way to the Supreme Court. Watch his actions more than his words.
- Here’s a small sign of what may lie ahead: As reported by the N.Y. Times, the Trump campaign — citing the possibility that “multiple states will require recounts” — is raising money to continue ballot fights into mid-December:
7. Don’t hyperventilate about court cases. There will probably be many. But wait until there are actual verdicts and appeals to appraise the significance.
8. Brace yourself for 78 days of drama and turmoil from Nov. 4 through the inauguration.
- No one working for Trump or Joe Biden thinks the post-election period will be remotely normal. Even if you get the result you want, anticipate months of wild maneuvering and protests.
- Here, too, keep it in perspective and don’t make matters worse by sharing or overreacting to false or misleading reports.
What’s next: The nation is headed into a firestorm. There’s no way it’s orderly or normal, or even necessarily over when it seems over.
- All we can do is be smart about what’s to come, and wise in our responses.