You did it.
Right now the popular vote is exactly 3.5%, exactly as you predicted. I wonder what fraction of a percent of Americans predicted Obama would win by such a margin. Sure it will change some and may move to somewhere shy of 4%, but to have be so bold as to predict this large a margin, well, kudos.
I wonder if Dean Chambers (Mr. Unskewed, predicting a 1.8 point Romney margin) will contact you, or Steve Forbes, who predicted a 3.5 point Romney margin, will give a ringy-dingy.
These guys (Republicans) are just wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong and wrong. Just think of all the Iraq wrongs; the relationship between tax cuts (take either Clinton or Bush) and jobs; or Obama's faith, birth or politics; or Reagan and communism; or the financial crisis and cause; or what the Tea Party was really about; or the founders belief regarding corporations, the aristocracy or inheritance; or on science; or math; or grammar; or geography; or history; or statistics; or facts; or debts or deficits; or just plain comprehension, such as with the constitution.
When I'm wrong, I feel bad. More importantly, I try to correct my logic, my basis, or my analysis to prevent further errors.
They, on the other hand, continue undaunted as they honor their belief systems while ignoring reality. As Bill Mahre said, when will they have to answer for their constant wrongs? When they are wrong, they shrug their shoulders and bounce back. They hit the airways with not only renewed vigor but arrogance.
At least with this election, we have actual numerical predictions and we have actual numerical results to contrast. There is no squishy grey area . . . yet. It will take years before Republicans will revise history to say Obama didn't really win.