OT: Election/Politics thread, Part 6

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Feanor
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Post by Feanor »

matthewk wrote:The 67-page report was full of facts and evidence of fraud. Voter fraud does exist, and it's more than 1-2 votes.
And yet the evidence of election fraud in Ohio during the last election didn't bother you one bit. Funny that.

http://www.amazon.com/What-Went-Wrong-O ... 089733535X
http://www.amazon.com/What-Happened-Ohi ... pd_sim_b_2
Last edited by Feanor on Tue Nov 04, 2008 12:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by wco81 »

matthewk wrote:
wco81 wrote:
matthewk wrote: You beat me to it. I heard about the WSJ article on the radio this morning. So voter fraud does not exist, huh?
It's an opinion piece by columnist John Fund, who appears as a RW pundit on cable TV.

It's not a news piece.
So f-ing what? I don't care if the guy appears as a cross-dressing gay rights activist on cable tv.

The 67-page report was full of facts and evidence of fraud. Voter fraud does exist, and it's more than 1-2 votes.
The WSJ Editorial page is looked at the same way you look at Michael Moore documentaries. It represents a certain POV, not journalism.

If there was any substance to that 2004 report, why hasn't more been done with it? The Justice dept. was pushing US Attorneys all over the country to prosecute voter fraud cases, often at the behest of state and local GOP groups alleging fraud all over the country.

Why did Bush countenance the alleged fraud in WI?
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Post by Jared »

Another one for the annals of reporting in the right-wing opinion press.
WSJ wrote:Last week Mike Sandvick, head of the Milwaukee Police Department's five-man Special Investigative Unit, was told by superiors not to send anyone to polling places on Election Day. He was also told his unit -- which wrote the book on how fraud could subvert the vote in his hometown -- would be disbanded.
http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/33825499.html
Flynn told WTMJ's Charlie Sykes today there have been no discussions about disbanding the unit, noting it is needed in a city the size of Milwaukee. He also said that members of the unit are in squad cars, traveling around the city and will go to polling places if needed.

"I want them available to respond to complaints," he said. "They are in the field."

Flynn said the unit is part of a larger effort by the department to respond to problems. He said about 50 officers are on special Election Day duty, some traveling with prosecutors, others out with fellow officers or in a command post.

"We are making a major effort to make sure this is a free, fair election," Flynn said.
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Post by pk500 »

Alternative methods to get election results besides network and cable TV:

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10081981-38.html

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Post by matthewk »

Feanor wrote:
matthewk wrote:The 67-page report was full of facts and evidence of fraud. Voter fraud does exist, and it's more than 1-2 votes.
And yet the evidence of election fraud in Ohio during the last election didn't bother you one bit. Funny that.

http://www.amazon.com/What-Went-Wrong-O ... 089733535X
http://www.amazon.com/What-Happened-Ohi ... pd_sim_b_2
Who said it didn't bother me? Do you know me at all outside of this forum? That was just a real f-ing stupid and insulting thing to say.

Jared, this is the kind of crap that needs to be monitored just as much as any openly personal attack. In fact, this is a direct attack. This clown has no idea how I felt about the issues with Ohio back in 2004, and yet feels free to make any assumption he pleases about me.

BTW, I voted for Kerry in 2004. What does that do for your over-simplified mind?
Last edited by matthewk on Tue Nov 04, 2008 1:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by RobVarak »

Jared wrote:Another one for the annals of reporting in the right-wing opinion press.
Hardly.
"We are making a major effort to make sure this is a free, fair election," Flynn said.
I'd disagree pretty vehemently with that conclusion. They've got these guys driving around in a clown car drinking coffee rather than demonstrating a presence in the polling places. That's a damn-sight short of making a "major effort" by any reasonable measure.
Last edited by RobVarak on Tue Nov 04, 2008 1:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by wco81 »

Naples39 wrote:My point is that there is a a thousand factors that dictate levels of capital investment. Government only directly controls one of those factors, and that is taxes.

You can argue the magnitude of the effect of taxes on capital investment, but the effect of higher taxes, ceteris paribus, driving down capital investment is beyond reproach.
wco81 wrote:Where is the evidence that there's been a shortage in capital investment? There's certainly been a lack of investment in creating new jobs, certainly.
I think we'd all agree that unlike the 90s, or any other time in recent memory, we are in a uniquely bad time for capital formation. The credit crisis, the stock market crashing. Investors aren't exactly lining up at the doorstep of businesses. IMO, it is indefensible for government to compound this problem at this time by raising these taxes to historical levels which are even higher than those 'socialist' nations.
The govt. is going to be injecting hundreds of billions. The Fed cut the rates by 1/2 point a week or two ago. The Europeans are injecting even more and the ECB is expected to cut rates as well.

Some are investing, seeing bargains, like Buffett (who is supporting Obama). Even conservative investors who fear that socialist Obama are looking to see if the market stabilizes. There's a lot of cash on the sidelines.

I'm not saying the stock markets or the economy will turn around quickly. For one thing, the finance sector has lost some institutions and will be under regulation (like capital reserve ratios being enforced) which won't let them use the kind of leverage they've been used to.

Before predicting disaster, lets see how it plays out. The capitalists on CNBC sounded a hopeful note that Obama won't be led by the House Democrats, whatever that means.
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wco81 wrote:Most big companies are multinational. They derive about half their revenues and profits overseas.
Absolutely true, which is why it is increasingly futile to practice protectionism these days as Obama espouses. You can practically guarantee with these higher tax rates that capital investment that once would go into the United States will now be put into foreign investments in countries like Ireland, where the corporate tax rate is less than a third of the United States'.
First of all, the dollar has gained against the Euro recently, by something like 20%, because the dollar is seen as a safe haven. That's despite the higher rates you cite.

Sure some American companies have set up operations in places like Ireland in recent years. Do you know for a fact however that they're going there for lower tax rates or lower labor costs?

AFAIK, no American company has left the US completely for Ireland, as Haliburton for instance did when it moved to UAE.

Do you really believe American companies are exporting jobs to China and India for lower taxes over there?

Obama has talked about offering tax incentives to keep jobs in the US. But I suspect that won't be enough given the labor cost savings available in countries where the per capita income is less than 1/20th of our per capita income.

Otherwise, his economic advisors include Volker and Rubin, not exactly anti-capitalists. An early advisor is Austan Goolsbee, an economist from that hotbed of socialism, the University of Chicago.

And The Economist, that Socialist organ and found of Robin Hood economics, has endorsed Obama.
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Post by matthewk »

wco81 wrote:The WSJ Editorial page is looked at the same way you look at Michael Moore documentaries. It represents a certain POV, not journalism.

If there was any substance to that 2004 report, why hasn't more been done with it? The Justice dept. was pushing US Attorneys all over the country to prosecute voter fraud cases, often at the behest of state and local GOP groups alleging fraud all over the country.

Why did Bush countenance the alleged fraud in WI?
They are still the facts found by an investigation, no matter how many redirections you try.
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Post by Jared »

matthewk wrote:Who said it didn't bother me? Do you know me at all outside of this forum? That was just a real f-ing stupid and insulting thing to say.

Jared, this is the kind of crap that needs to be monitored just as much as any openly personal attack. In fact, this is a direct attack. This clown has no idea how I felt about the issues with Ohio back in 2004, and yet feels free to make any assumption he pleases about me.

BTW, I voted for Kerry in 2004. What does that do for your over-simplified mind?
Listen, if I was going to ban everyone who mischaracterized the thoughts and opinions of another poster, then we wouldn't have a thread. I've tried to draw the line at something sensible and easily definable: personal attacks. If Feanor wants to make that post, fine. It's a dumb thing to say, but if I'm definitely not taking action either based on whether posts are dumb/smart, show poor argumentation, etc. You, of course, have the complete and total right to call him out for making assumptions about what you think. The line is drawn at personal attacks.

The rules are really simple, and are not designed to turn everyone into shrinking violets. There will be emotion, bad arguments, etc. I only ask no personal attacks. That's it.
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Post by webdanzer »

"We are making a major effort to make sure this is a free, fair election," Flynn said.
RobVarak wrote:I'd disagree pretty vehemently with that conclusion. They've got these guys driving around in a clown car drinking coffee rather than demonstrating a presence in the polling places. That's a damn-sight short of making a "major effort" by any reasonable measure.
I was going to say the same thing. Pulling them from polling places to put them in cars certainly doesn't seem like it is a move to help them catch fraud.
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Post by wco81 »

What are the cops suppose to do, check IDs and voter rolls themselves?

Work as poll workers?

If someone who's not on the voter roll tries to vote, the poll workers will let him unless there's a cop standing right there?
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Post by Naples39 »

WCO, you make some fair points.

I'll just say thee more things.

-You talk about the government injecting hundreds of billions of dollars. Time and time again the government has proven to be a lousy investor, and private investors get much better return on their dollar, finding better value and more rewarding investments. Government investment is no substitute to private investment, which is usually more productive and actually builds individual wealth as well as corporate wealth.

-You've thrown out a lot individual examples, and differing labor costs abroad, on which you are definitely correct. No presidential administration can control those things. The administration however can have a profound effect on behavior on the margin, and this is what I fear from Obama's policies.

-I'm not trying to say Obama is anti-capitalist, but I do believe many of his policies very well could turn out to be a step backwards concerning economic growth. As I've said for months, it seems to me that Obama's tax policy (both for federal income and corporate taxes) is built upon liberal social justice more than ways to grow and restore the economy.
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Post by Jared »

RobVarak wrote:
Jared wrote:Another one for the annals of reporting in the right-wing opinion press.
Hardly.
Fund reports that they are disbanding the unit, without getting comment from the police chief. The police chief then responds that it is not true. Fund says that the unit was told "not to send anyone to polling places on Election Day", without comment from the police chief. The police chief says that they will go to the polling places if needed.

Maybe the police chief is lying, though we don't have any evidence of that. Anyways, you have an article where the author relies on one source without talking to other sources, and is likely wrong. And this is good reporting? Or fair opinion-piece writing?
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Post by Jared »

Naples39 wrote:-I'm not trying to say Obama is anti-capitalist, but I do believe many of his policies very well could turn out to be a step backwards concerning economic growth. As I've said for months, it seems to me that Obama's tax policy (both for federal income and corporate taxes) is built upon liberal social justice more than ways to grow and restore the economy.
I think this is where I disagree. I think his tax policy is based on the idea that a stronger middle class leads to a better economy, and that tax cuts to the middle class and poor will have a more direct and better effect on the economy than tax cuts to the rich.
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Post by RobVarak »

wco81 wrote:What are the cops suppose to do, check IDs and voter rolls themselves?

Work as poll workers?

If someone who's not on the voter roll tries to vote, the poll workers will let him unless there's a cop standing right there?
Their presence in high-risk precincts gives a serious shot in the arm to the election judges when it comes to dealing with issues of fraud and intimidation.

Many members of my family have served as election judges. I think we vastly underestimate how totally unprepared many judges are and how spectacularly easy it is to take advantage of them. And I'm not just talking about the ones related to me :)

Regardless of your agnosticism on issues of voter fraud, it is beyond argument that there is and always has been voter intimidation. Precint captains hire thugs, organizations send out heavies etc. A unit like this is ideal for policing the polling place and creating an environment free of intimidation and coersion.
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Post by RobVarak »

Incidentally, I think that everyone, media, blogger, DSP commenter alike, should spend one election working as an election judge, block captain or ward committeman in Chicago before discussing issues of electoral malfeasance.

Reasonable people who have no such experience really have no idea how many things that they probably believe can't happen or rarely happen are de rigeur on an enormous scale on Election Day in Daleyville.
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Post by JackB1 »

XXXIV wrote:
JackB1 wrote:
He's clearly not the same "Maverick" he was 10 years ago when I respected him.
He is truly a man to be disrespected.
Let me rephrase......

I don't respect the way he has run his campaign.
I respect his service to our country.

I don't know him "as a man". Neither do you. His service and loyalty to our country is extremely commendable. That doesn't neccesarily make him a good politician.
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Post by JackB1 »

matthewk wrote:
Cause: Bush was elect....*ahem* stole the elections.
Effect: He single-handedly brought the Earth to near total destruction.
He sure didn't help.
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Post by Naples39 »

Jared wrote:I think this is where I disagree. I think his tax policy is based on the idea that a stronger middle class leads to a better economy, and that tax cuts to the middle class and poor will have a more direct and better effect on the economy than tax cuts to the rich.
I just fundamentally think that's the wrong question. The question isn't whether we should give tax cuts to the 'rich', the 'middle class' or to the poor. The question is, where will a tax cut create the greatest economic growth?

The path to more jobs and creation of wealth via capital investment and expanding business is clear and supported by a mountain of theory. These are precisely the type of new jobs on which a healthy middle class is employed.

I have yet to hear anybody on either side of the aisle ever present a theory as to how Obama's tax credits will create jobs or wealth. Under Obama's plan 44% of Americans will pay no federal income tax. Are we supposed to rely on this lower 44% to create jobs? I certainly am not.

Again I extend my open invitation for links that argue a coherent theory as to how lessening the tax liability for those that already pay very little tax will spur economic growth.
Last edited by Naples39 on Tue Nov 04, 2008 2:04 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by JackB1 »

matthewk wrote: This clown has no idea how I felt about the issues with Ohio back in 2004, and yet feels free to make any assumption he pleases about me.
You mean to tell me you have never made assumptions about people here based on a few posts?

BTW, you called him a "clown". He made no direct insult to you.
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Post by Teal »

JackB1 wrote:
Teal wrote:In other words, you want McCain to have been a damned democrat, a liberal, or something of the sort. Predictable, but still quite unbelievable. Anything other than a republican. Well, that's what he is. He is most certainly not Bush, no matter what the blue kool aid crowd wants to chant and repeat ad nauseum. But it would not have mattered. Had McCain gone further left, you and others would've painted him a 'me too' candidate, and repudiated him anyway.
He's clearly not the same "Maverick" he was 10 years ago when I respected him. Just the way he chose his VP said volumes to me.
His economic policies are not providing any decernable difference from what the Rep party & Bush has done the past 8 years and that is the reason he will lose this election. Plain and simple.
Again, you want him to be a democrat, or a liberal. Jack, I don't have an issue with how you vote (though I'd love to shake some sense into you! :D ), but at least just vote for your guy and stop wishing the other guy was more like your guy. That isn't the way it works. I wish McCain was more conservative, but he's a helluva lot better than the true alternative. His economice policies aren't as radical as Obama's, but in my opinion, that's nothing if not a very good thing...
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Post by wco81 »

Naples39 wrote:WCO, you make some fair points.

I'll just say thee more things.

-You talk about the government injecting hundreds of billions of dollars. Time and time again the government has proven to be a lousy investor, and private investors get much better return on their dollar, finding better value and more rewarding investments. Government investment is no substitute to private investment, which is usually more productive and actually builds individual wealth as well as corporate wealth.

-You've thrown out a lot individual examples, and differing labor costs abroad, on which you are definitely correct. No presidential administration can control those things. The administration however can have a profound effect on behavior on the margin, and this is what I fear from Obama's policies.

-I'm not trying to say Obama is anti-capitalist, but I do believe many of his policies very well could turn out to be a step backwards concerning economic growth. As I've said for months, it seems to me that Obama's tax policy (both for federal income and corporate taxes) is built upon liberal social justice more than ways to grow and restore the economy.
There was no choice as far as the bailout goes. Govt. had to be the backstop. In retrospect, I think Paulsen would admit that letting Lehman Brothers fail was a mistake, which precipitated the stock market meltdown.

Of course, they might have had to rescue institutions piecemeal, instead of crafting one big plan.

So it's not a question of the govt. getting better returns. It was more about stabilizing the markets.

As far as private vs. public finance, we may have an extended discussion in this country as there are calls now for stimulus plans, including public works projects to rebuild infrastructure.

Obama isn't crafting his economic policy on some notion of social justice (or else The Economist would have called him out on it). It's more demand-side or Keynesian economics (which to supply-siders might as well be anything other than economics).

We've seen what's happened when the followers of Hayek, Friedman, Laffer, etc. had control of the govt's finances. They least of all should not be questioning the assumptions of other economic theories.
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Post by Naples39 »

wco81 wrote:There was no choice as far as the bailout goes. Govt. had to be the backstop. In retrospect, I think Paulsen would admit that letting Lehman Brothers fail was a mistake, which precipitated the stock market meltdown.
Agreed.

But I'm not debating the wisdom of the bailout. I'm taking about prospective government investment under an Obama administration in place of private investment that has been deterred by higher taxes.

At this point I think I've pretty much said what I have to say. Onwards with election news.
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Teal wrote: Again, you want him to be a democrat, or a liberal. Jack, I don't have an issue with how you vote (though I'd love to shake some sense into you! :D ), but at least just vote for your guy and stop wishing the other guy was more like your guy. That isn't the way it works. I wish McCain was more conservative, but he's a helluva lot better than the true alternative. His economice policies aren't as radical as Obama's, but in my opinion, that's nothing if not a very good thing...
I am not "wishing" McCain was anything. He is what he is. I feel Obama will do more for our economy and our position in the world than McCain will. That's pretty much it. McCain's age is also a major concern for me...not to mention who is next in line to inherit his spot. Talk about scary!
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Post by RobVarak »

10 Reasons to totally ignore exit polls.

From FiveThirtyEight.com
1. Exit polls have a much larger intrinsic margin for error than regular polls. This is because of what are known as cluster sampling techniques. Exit polls are not conducted at all precincts, but only at some fraction thereof. Although these precincts are selected at random and are supposed to be reflective of their states as a whole, this introduces another opportunity for error to occur (say, for instance, that a particular precinct has been canvassed especially heavily by one of the campaigns). This makes the margins for error somewhere between 50-90% higher than they would be for comparable telephone surveys.

2. Exit polls have consistently overstated the Democratic share of the vote. Many of you will recall this happening in 2004, when leaked exit polls suggested that John Kerry would have a much better day than he actually had. But this phenomenon was hardly unique to 2004. In 2000, for instance, exit polls had Al Gore winning states like Alabama and Georgia (!). If you go back and watch The War Room, you'll find George Stephanopolous and James Carville gloating over exit polls showing Bill Clinton winning states like Indiana and Texas, which of course he did not win.

3. Exit polls were particularly bad in this year's primaries. They overstated Barack Obama's performance by an average of about 7 points.

4. Exit polls challenge the definition of a random sample. Although the exit polls have theoretically established procedures to collect a random sample -- essentially, having the interviewer approach every nth person who leaves the polling place -- in practice this is hard to execute at a busy polling place, particularly when the pollster may be standing many yards away from the polling place itself because of electioneering laws.

5. Democrats may be more likely to participate in exit polls. Related to items #1 and #4 above, Scott Rasmussen has found that Democrats supporters are more likely to agree to participate in exit polls, probably because they are more enthusiastic about this election.

6. Exit polls may have problems calibrating results from early voting. Contrary to the conventional wisdom, exit polls will attempt account for people who voted before election day in most (although not all) states by means of a random telephone sample of such voters. However, this requires the polling firms to guess at the ratio of early voters to regular ones, and sometimes they do not guess correctly. In Florida in 2000, for instance, there was a significant underestimation of the absentee vote, which that year was a substantially Republican vote, leading to an overestimation of Al Gore's share of the vote, and contributing to the infamous miscall of the state.

7. Exit polls may also miss late voters. By "late" voters I mean persons who come to their polling place in the last couple of hours of the day, after the exit polls are out of the field. Although there is no clear consensus about which types of voters tend to vote later rather than earlier, this adds another way in which the sample may be nonrandom, particularly in precincts with long lines or extended voting hours.

8. "Leaked" exit poll results may not be the genuine article. Sometimes, sources like Matt Drudge and Jim Geraghty have gotten their hands on the actual exit polls collected by the network pools. At other times, they may be reporting data from "first-wave" exit polls, which contain extremely small sample sizes and are not calibrated for their demographics. And at other places on the Internet (though likely not from Gergahty and Drudge, who actually have reasonably good track records), you may see numbers that are completely fabricated.

9. A high-turnout election may make demographic weighting difficult. Just as regular, telephone polls are having difficulty this cycle estimating turnout demographics -- will younger voters and minorities show up in greater numbers? -- the same challenges await exit pollsters. Remember, an exit poll is not a definitive record of what happened at the polling place; it is at best a random sampling.

10. You'll know the actual results soon enough anyway. Have patience, my friends, and consider yourselves lucky: in France, it is illegal to conduct a poll of any kind within 48 hours of the election. But exit polls are really more trouble than they're worth, at least as a predictive tool. An independent panel created by CNN in the wake of the Florida disaster in 2000 recommended that the network completely ignore exit polls when calling particular states. I suggest that you do the same.
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