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Name:Megan
Location: Washington, DC
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I need some followers...

I haven't posted in forever, but let's be serious, who really reads this anyway? I do apologize, but things have been very busy here with Townhall Magazine. We're working hard to put out a good product for all of you! The July issue is packed with all-American stories celebrating the 232nd birthday of the United States. To get a free copy, visit http://www.gettownhall.com/. Or click here to subscribe and get Andrew McCarthy's Willful Blindness: Memoir of the Jihad for free.
 
Chris Regal, "community builder," here at Townhall has mentioned me several times recently in his blog, My World. His bloggers apparently hate me because I criticize him for his horrendous grammar - a vast lack of punctuation and an array of misspellings are sprinkled into every sentence. According to Chris's bloggers, they love him because they feel like they're having a conversation with him. From the "TH Nazi" (My World's nickname for me when referring to my grammar rules) to the readers of My World: I get to have conversations with Chris all the time and believe me, while his blog is EXACTLY how he talks, he has the time in the day to use the spell check feature on MSWord. Also, he's being called out by an intern and he's a full-time employee. There's something wrong here.
 
If I do have any readership, please back me on this. I need some support during this on-going battle.
 
 In Friday fashion, here are some items that have interested me this week:
 
- WSJ wrote a great editorial about the Supreme Court's decision to overturn the DC gun ban. Yesterday was a wonderful day for the United States thanks to the USSC's landmark decision.
- I'm a traditionalist. I'm considering having a cocktail party and serving old-school drinks like these featured by MSN.
- At the ripe age of 21, I have worked in both the 88th and 48th hottest cities in the country.
- Shout out to my Dad who has hit the Net! Care to learn a little about a small, all-American coal cracker town? Here he offers a little history lesson on the apparatus of the Freeland Fire Department as they prepare to celebrate their 125th anniversary. I'm from a family of firefighters - my Dad has been a volunteer fireman for 36 years and both my grandfathers were highly active firemen for their entire adult lives.
- Freeland is on the opposite side of the Pocono's from Milford, but Milford is still NEPA at its finest. I hate to be the small town girl who blames the big city for the problems, but in this case, we can all blame New York City and the huge influx of people surging into the Pocono's. Our poor region has gone from quaint and comfortable to slimy and STD-ridden. The spread of the cit-idiots (as my Southampton roommate refers to them) has caused a downward spiral in everything from education to the economy across NEPA.
- Back to my favorite subject - grammar!! "Errors that Aren't: 12 Grammar Rules That You Can Toss Out the Window." Personally, I like all of them and want to keep them forever.
Stop Lou Barletta? I say we stop the flow of illegals across our borders. This guy isn't even from Hazleton.
- My best friends say I suffer from the "bad boy syndrome," to paraphrase their much more colorful terminology. Now, it's scientifically proven that bad guys really do get the girls - the jury is still out as to whether this helps my argument or my girlfriends'.
- I'm finally going to go to the Old Post Office this weekend!! I hope all of you Townhallers enjoy your weekends, too!
 
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Friday the 13th

Friday the 13th has already gotten the best of me and it's only 11am. A mouse and three trains later, I finally walked into work at Townhall Magazine an hour late.
 
My congressman accosted a blogger this week. Thankfully, Lou Barletta, the mayor of the city of Hazleton, has a good chance of finally ousting Kanjo from the seat he's held for 23 years. It will be the best day of my life if the 11th congressional district of Pennsylvania elects a Republican for the first time since 1982.
 
That's it for today... I put all of my energy into getting to work this morning!
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Can McCain win the young vote?

 Now that the Democratic nominee is all but definite, it’s time to start looking forward to the general election! Election Day is by far my favorite day of the entire year and I’m excited that the time has finally come for McCain to begin his official push to the finish line. I’ve been seeing lists here and there about how McCain can beat Obama and I’m pretty optimistic about the possibility. At the same time, this talk about Hillary being the VP is kind of starting to scare me – I’m finding myself doubting the GOP against the two celebrity-esque candidates. Both of them appeal to different demographics and I’m worried that they might become a dynamic duo and collect tons of votes. With that being said I’m hoping Obama defies half of the Democratic Party and selects someone besides Sen. Clinton. In that case, I think it’s highly plausible that McCain can win, mostly for the reasons that others have cited like swaying some Democrats and shedding light on the real Obama, but will McCain be able to win over any groups who are “in the bag” for Obama? Can McCain, with his old age, perhaps win over young people? I don’t think he can win the majority of young people, but I think he can gain some ground with them if he explores a few different venues.
  1. Take advantage of Obama’s anti-gun stance. The incidents at Northern Illinois University and Virginia Tech have spurred college groups across the country to push for the right to concealed carry on campuses. The moment isn’t huge yet, but it is affecting a lot of campuses and I think that if McCain touches on it, it will show college students – whether they agree or not – that he’s in tune with the topics concerning them. Even students at Penn State are rallying behind the cause.
  2. Get some pointers from Ron Paul. Everyone knows by now that the only candidate’s whose student following rivaled Obama’s was Paul’s. Somehow Ron Paul, who is older than McCain, managed to stir up colleges and universities with his libertarian rhetoric. Paul is known for his strict, to-the-letter view of the Constitution. To win over more young voters, McCain should play into this idea more by promising to follow the Constitution as it was intended.
  3. Yell and scream about Obama’s connections to Tony Rezko. Young people always care about volunteering and helping out the world. They also want a president who will help the poor and automatically assume that the Democratic nominee is the one for the job. Now that the general election is underway, McCain needs to educate young voters about Obama’s biggest fundraiser. A lot of my friends support Obama – little do they know about his connections to a now convicted, corrupt slumlord that did everything but help the poor of Chicago. Do the Peace Corps volunteers want a president who benefited from money extorted from people and forced his poor residents to live in horrific situations? Doubtful.

Like I said, I’m aware that despite these reasons Obama will still probably win the majority of young voters, but McCain can at least try. The youth in this country think that Obama is some kind of savior which is so absurd that it’s actually sad. Hopefully, John McCain can open the eyes of at least some college students by proving to them that just because Obama is “young and hip” (or whatever) just like them does NOT mean he will make a good president. It especially doesn’t mean that he automatically shares their views. I know young people are notorious for not getting out the vote, but I’ve always been very optimistic (perhaps falsely) about my generation and this year, I’m praying they open their minds and come out to vote – for John McCain.

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