Doubt
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2002
- Messages
- 8,106
Here I sit at my computer watching election coverage in a country I never expected to visit when I was young. As a former cold warrior, I still find it funny that I am here at all.
Here is what I observed in the city that I am in: Nothing. I did not go out looking either. But I am living in an apartment right next to a federal government building that includes the local police station.
Now I am watching the returns on TV. I am incompetent to provide anyone a play by play of what is happening since I can barely speak enough Russian to order food at McDonald's.
The TV stations started covering the returns about 8 PM. They have several talking heads comparing the results. This is a waste of time since everybody knew who was going to win anyway. This is, however the first time I have even seen pictures of candidates who are not Putin’s hand picked successor. (I have been here continuously since Jan. 4th.)
The two stations I have been watching have no big nationwide graphic like we have in the US. But they also don’t have the electoral college BS to deal with. What they do have are studio audiences that applaud periodically. What statements they are applauding I don’t have a clue about. Who and where these people came from I also don’t know anything about either.
One station went to live coverage on Red Square where a band was playing. Not sure what that was all about. I could ask my translator tomorrow, but I am pretty sure she is not paying attention to the coverage.
I did hear one reporter using the term “exit poll”. That was the English words they used, not something I managed to sort out with my very limited Russian. Medvedev is winning by a wide margin, which is what was expected. The current second place candidate for president has a bit under 20% of the vote, which is more than I expected based on the coverage from the US.
Pre-election coverage on TV was sparse. The opposition was not covered at all from what I could see. As best I can tell, few of the people I have been working with had any plans to vote today. (I only asked two of them.)
It is nice to see that the two stations don’t show the exact same totals for percentages. I have not seen any raw numbers for vote totals.
I do know that there was at least some real competition at the local level for some offices. I saw one political poster that had been up for only a couple of days defaced and eventually covered over with posters for the competitors. Fliers even showed up in my mail box for different candidates. I never tried to translate more than a few slogans from those fliers.
One thing to note based on my recent travels is that all political advertisements appear to follow similar formats these days. Last fall I was in Mexico and the posters and billboards had the same basic format. Candidate off to one side and the big print they want you to read on the other side. Details down at the bottom and the flag behind the candidate.
Here is what I observed in the city that I am in: Nothing. I did not go out looking either. But I am living in an apartment right next to a federal government building that includes the local police station.
Now I am watching the returns on TV. I am incompetent to provide anyone a play by play of what is happening since I can barely speak enough Russian to order food at McDonald's.
The TV stations started covering the returns about 8 PM. They have several talking heads comparing the results. This is a waste of time since everybody knew who was going to win anyway. This is, however the first time I have even seen pictures of candidates who are not Putin’s hand picked successor. (I have been here continuously since Jan. 4th.)
The two stations I have been watching have no big nationwide graphic like we have in the US. But they also don’t have the electoral college BS to deal with. What they do have are studio audiences that applaud periodically. What statements they are applauding I don’t have a clue about. Who and where these people came from I also don’t know anything about either.
One station went to live coverage on Red Square where a band was playing. Not sure what that was all about. I could ask my translator tomorrow, but I am pretty sure she is not paying attention to the coverage.
I did hear one reporter using the term “exit poll”. That was the English words they used, not something I managed to sort out with my very limited Russian. Medvedev is winning by a wide margin, which is what was expected. The current second place candidate for president has a bit under 20% of the vote, which is more than I expected based on the coverage from the US.
Pre-election coverage on TV was sparse. The opposition was not covered at all from what I could see. As best I can tell, few of the people I have been working with had any plans to vote today. (I only asked two of them.)
It is nice to see that the two stations don’t show the exact same totals for percentages. I have not seen any raw numbers for vote totals.
I do know that there was at least some real competition at the local level for some offices. I saw one political poster that had been up for only a couple of days defaced and eventually covered over with posters for the competitors. Fliers even showed up in my mail box for different candidates. I never tried to translate more than a few slogans from those fliers.
One thing to note based on my recent travels is that all political advertisements appear to follow similar formats these days. Last fall I was in Mexico and the posters and billboards had the same basic format. Candidate off to one side and the big print they want you to read on the other side. Details down at the bottom and the flag behind the candidate.
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