Politics | Election 2008 This Election Isn't Change, It's More of the Same: Didion By Kevin Spak Posted Oct 17, 2008 3:02 PM CDT Copied In this Oct. 13, 1988 file photo, Michael Dukakis shakes hands with Vice President George Bush, left, prior to their second and final debate at Pauley Pavillion on UCLA campus, in Los Angeles, Calif. (AP Photo/Lennox McLendon, file) The striking thing about this election season isn’t how different it’s been from years past, “but precisely how similar,” Joan Didion writes for Salon. "Time got wasted in the familiar ways," she laments. The country is in the grip of a startling transformation, but "in the end the old notes had been struck, the old language used." The parallel, borrowed from MSNBC's Chris Matthews, is 1988. "Now as then, the same intractable questions were avoided and in the end successfully evaded," Didion writes. Whether ignoring the wars in favor of focusing on pigs and lipstick or misstating the details of the economic meltdown, the national candidates missed the point. And voters never balked: “Amnesia was our preferred state.” Read These Next Christina Applegate pulls back the curtain on her real life. Driver who killed Dixie Chicks founder hears his fate. Cops say assisted living worker fatally shot a resident in the head. SCOTUS hands significant loss to private prison company. Report an error