What you who want to win? This seems to be the most popular question among the English in the day of elections in the U.S., is that the media shock wave that generated the American electoral process, has come to us with the same force and deploy it as if this election would have been ours.
It is hard to find a English that does not speak clearly for Obama or McCain, or lacks an opinion. However, paradoxically, it is equally difficult to find a English man who knows the two candidates' electoral program, or you can argue how it can affect the future of international politics on arrival in the White House from a Democrat or a Republican. Moreover, it is very difficult to find a English you know in some depth into American society and its problems, and even going so far, not so easy to find a English man who has ever visited the United States.
And that English society has also succumbed to the juggernaut of American political circus and the media blitz of his campaign. And no wonder, since it comes from a country where politics is essentially to the image being projected, eclipsing the content, where the message is merely empty words like "honor", "patriotism" and "pride" and where major issues are still addressed with determination to avoid a political position that could compromise the election results.
No one escapes the image and marketing is the engine of U.S. policy, whose design will depend largely decanting the balance between two parties, instead of what is intended to show, not greatly differ ideologically. Greetings
fast
Elsupersonico
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