American teens have spoken, and they want George W. Bush for president. Nearly 1.4 million teens voted in the nation's largest mock election, and the Republican incumbent wound up with 393 electoral votes and 55 percent of the total votes cast.
Democratic challenger Sen. John Kerry received 145 electoral votes, far short of the 270 electoral votes needed to win a presidential election. Kerry received 45 percent of the total votes, while five percent of teens selected the third-party option, though no third-party presidential hopefuls managed to pick up any electoral votes.
Segaholic2 wrote:I was under the impression that most teens leaned towards Kerry, if only because it's the popular thing to hate America and Bush right now.
And Texans, because Bush is from Texas.
OMGIHATZORZ TEH HOLIC!!!!!~!!@!!!!!!!1112`212121eleventyeightyfiveteneleventwoeightone
I thought Channel One was in California. Oh, and our school had to do that "One Vote" thing, you had to vote online obviously. We saw the results on TV this afternoon, third party (not even Nader) only got 5% of the votes, and Hawaii voted for Kerry. How many people in Hawaii have the internet anyway?
I'm being handed something... This just in, it doesn't really matter because most teens don't vote anyway, and most of the people who were involved with the mock election are ignorant and not of voting age.
A few years ago, in 01-02 I think, they would play this one Mario GBA commercial (Super Mario World 1 or 2 I think) over and over and over again. Like every commercial break, every day, for weeks. Sometimes they would even show it, play a navy commercial, then show it again.
Protodude wrote:A few years ago, in 01-02 I think, they would play this one Mario GBA commercial (Super Mario World 1 or 2 I think) over and over and over again. Like every commercial break, every day, for weeks. Sometimes they would even show it, play a navy commercial, then show it again.
I remember that, it was annoying. VERB, IT'S WHAT YOU DO IN THE NAVY WHILE YOU PLAY SUPER MARIO WORLD BETWEEN ASSPOUNDINGS.
It's a "free" new channel to be shown in public schools to students. Most students are forced to watch it. Coincidentally, it's packed with a ton of commericials. Basically it's marketing that teachers can force down the throats of impressionable young children.
Yay for the commercialization of public learning institutions! Let's teach kids what's really important: To buy things from Wal*Mart!