More talk of abandoning country
I swear I do not understand this. I mean, I didn’t like Clinton, but I still stayed in the country. Snippets:
Leora Dowling and her husband thought returning from deep in “red” America to her native New England would make them feel more comfortable, more like the people around them shared their values. Since the election, she’s been contemplating another move. To Italy.
“After the election, my husband and I asked ourselves, ‘How could our country be heading backward? How could so many people miss or choose to ignore the obvious failures of the Bush administration?'” the former Florida resident said.
President Bush pledged that one priority for his second term would be to heal the wounds that a bitter election — in which groups not formally connected to each candidate ran attack ads focused on character, not issues — seems to have opened for many Americans.
Dowling, a college professor who lives with her husband in Vermont, is not alone in feeling that the wounds cannot be healed, or at least that Bush is not the man to do it.
For Dowling, as for others who ABCNews.com spoke with, though the immediate anger may be focused on the president — whether because of the war in Iraq, his stance on same-sex weddings, what they say is his blurring of the line between church and state, or his championing of the Patriot Act — there is a broader concern. They say they feel the United States is changing in ways they do not like, and they feel powerless to stop it.
The sky is falling!:!: