“We start
late, we end late, everyone knows we’re Republican anyway, and all we get for
our trouble is three lousy electoral votes,” says disillusioned
forty-three-year-old Michael Steiklen. “I walked four miles in the snow to get
to the closest poll place, and as soon as I come within a mile of civilization,
the first thing I see is a giant Obama party in the front yard. Obviously, my
vote matters a lot in the future of the country.”
Sarah
Palin’s remarkable debut onto the national stage in the 2008 election briefly
put Alaska on the map, but four years later, most Americans have finally
managed to blot out the traumatic memories. “Alaska? What’s that?” asked Terrie
Brewer, thirty-four, of Ohio. “Isn’t it, like, part of Russia?”
With
mounting evidence against any indication that Alaska has any bearing at all on
the election, Alaskans are finally starting to bow to the inevitable, expressing
inclinations of seceding from the U.S. and joining Canada. “It’s not like
anyone would notice,” says Steiklen, “I hear there’s a huge colony of
Republicans coming over already. Now we can finally get decent health care
without having to cooperate with the Democrats for it.”
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