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#26 2006-10-31 3:00 pm
- Freakout Jackson
- Meme-free

- From: ::moderated like a mo-fo::
- Registered: 2001-08-21
- Posts: 6592
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Yeah, that's the most simple explanation.
"The two symbols of the Republican Party: an elephant, and a big fat white guy who is threatened by change." - Seth MacFarlane
I couldn't deal with a clone of myself. I would probably kill him inside a week, and tell the police it was justifiable homisuicide, and tell them to sit around and hang out with me for a week to show them why. ~ Dan
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#27 2006-10-31 4:36 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
The most simple explanation is that dems are using "voter fraud" the same way that repubs use "terror threat".
FUD - the oldest trick in the book.
There are two kinds of people who keep rattlesnakes.
Those who have been bit, and those who will be bit. - Al Wolf.
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#28 2006-10-31 4:44 pm
- Freakout Jackson
- Meme-free

- From: ::moderated like a mo-fo::
- Registered: 2001-08-21
- Posts: 6592
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Yet that's not the argument you were just using.
"The two symbols of the Republican Party: an elephant, and a big fat white guy who is threatened by change." - Seth MacFarlane
I couldn't deal with a clone of myself. I would probably kill him inside a week, and tell the police it was justifiable homisuicide, and tell them to sit around and hang out with me for a week to show them why. ~ Dan
Online
#29 2006-10-31 5:15 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Freakout Jackson wrote:
Yet that's not the argument you were just using.
The arguement I was just using is that this would be a silly time to rig an election. And it would be, for the reasons I stated.
That doesn't mean it wouldn't be tried, but if i was planning it, I'd leave 2006 alone and for 2008 when there is more to lose.
Last edited by resedit (2006-10-31 5:16 pm)
There are two kinds of people who keep rattlesnakes.
Those who have been bit, and those who will be bit. - Al Wolf.
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#30 2006-10-31 5:31 pm
- jerwin
- Sophist
- From: The Garden of Pure Ideology
- Registered: 2003-01-01
- Posts: 7436
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
resedit wrote:
The most simple explanation is that dems are using "voter fraud" the same way that repubs use "terror threat".
FUD - the oldest trick in the book.
An interesting assertion there. The Republicans want a war because they want to funnel large sums of government cash into open-ended unsupervised contracts with Halliburton. The Republicans want expensive, closed source, smurfy voting machines because they want to funnel large sums of cash into Diebold.
The Democrats want a sensible anti-terror policy that yields results. The Democrats want independently verifiable, secure voting machines.
One party is corrupt, beholden to special interests, and stupidity, while the other wants sensible intelligent policies that reflect the will of the people.
Some subjects actually enjoy pain, and withhold information they might otherwise have divulged in order to be punished.
Central Intelligence Agency. (1983). Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual
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#31 2006-10-31 6:28 pm
- D'Eyncourt
- OMGDICTATOR

- Registered: 2001-12-27
- Posts: 9011
- Website
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
resedit wrote:
jerwin wrote:
exit polling?
You know - not once have I ever been at a place where there was exit polling being done.
Seems to me that if you don't "exit pole" everywhere, your "exit poles" have opportunity for bias.
Also seems to me that some people may vote one way in private, and say they voted another when asked in public.
Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?
BOYCOTT SONY
"In fact, the polygraph looks for spikes in blood pressure, heart rate, respiration and perspiration. In other words, you can’t tell a lie from the sex act."--Robert L. Park, What's New for January 15, 2010
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#32 2006-10-31 6:34 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
D'Eyncourt wrote:
resedit wrote:
jerwin wrote:
exit polling?
You know - not once have I ever been at a place where there was exit polling being done.
Seems to me that if you don't "exit pole" everywhere, your "exit poles" have opportunity for bias.
Also seems to me that some people may vote one way in private, and say they voted another when asked in public.Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?
He does have a point that they dont exit poll everywhere, specifically absentee ballots.
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#33 2006-10-31 6:37 pm
- after-life
- Member

- Registered: 2003-12-25
- Posts: 2370
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Steyr AUG wrote:
D'Eyncourt wrote:
resedit wrote:
You know - not once have I ever been at a place where there was exit polling being done.
Seems to me that if you don't "exit pole" everywhere, your "exit poles" have opportunity for bias.
Also seems to me that some people may vote one way in private, and say they voted another when asked in public.Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?
He does have a point that they dont exit poll everywhere, specifically absentee ballots.
Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?
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#34 2006-10-31 6:41 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
after-life wrote:
Steyr AUG wrote:
D'Eyncourt wrote:
Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?He does have a point that they dont exit poll everywhere, specifically absentee ballots.
Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?
By all means, explain how you can get a representative sample of voters when not everyone has an equal chance of being polled?
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#35 2006-10-31 7:01 pm
- after-life
- Member

- Registered: 2003-12-25
- Posts: 2370
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
They can use historical data to determine differences in voter patterns between absentee voters and voters at the polls.
Give it a rest. Exit polls are extremely accurate, unless there are large shifts in voting patterns that can't be predicted beforehand.
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#36 2006-10-31 7:04 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
after-life wrote:
They can use historical data to determine differences in voter patterns between absentee voters and voters at the polls.
That is not an answer as to how everyone has an equal chance of being randomly selected for polling.
Give it a rest. Exit polls are extremely accurate, unless there are large shifts in voting patterns that can't be predicted beforehand.
Yes, because they were *so* accurate in 2004 
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#37 2006-10-31 7:06 pm
- after-life
- Member

- Registered: 2003-12-25
- Posts: 2370
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Steyr AUG wrote:
Yes, because they were *so* accurate in 2004
Yes, and it was an extreme shock. It had never happened before.
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#38 2006-10-31 7:07 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
after-life wrote:
Steyr AUG wrote:
Yes, because they were *so* accurate in 2004
Yes, and it was an extreme shock. It had never happened before.
How about everyone getting an equal chance at being randomly selected?
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#39 2006-10-31 7:12 pm
- D'Eyncourt
- OMGDICTATOR

- Registered: 2001-12-27
- Posts: 9011
- Website
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Steyr AUG wrote:
[snip]
By all means, explain how you can get a representative sample of voters when not everyone has an equal chance of being polled?
Because sampling is just that: a sample of the total vote. Even if you live in a voting district that is considered a bellweather for sampling, the chances that any one person might be selected is somewhere around 1 in 60 or worse (about 90,000 actual voters per Congressional district, maybe 1,500 people polled though probably fewer than that in a national election).
On the other hand, if you (like me) live in one of the many safe districts (and most of you do), then there is NO chance that you or I will ever see an exit pollster: not much point in sampling that vote because it will not be representative of the whole vote.
BOYCOTT SONY
"In fact, the polygraph looks for spikes in blood pressure, heart rate, respiration and perspiration. In other words, you can’t tell a lie from the sex act."--Robert L. Park, What's New for January 15, 2010
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#40 2006-10-31 7:21 pm
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
D'Eyncourt wrote:
Steyr AUG wrote:
[snip]
By all means, explain how you can get a representative sample of voters when not everyone has an equal chance of being polled?Because sampling is just that: a sample of the total vote. Even if you live in a voting district that is considered a bellweather for sampling, the chances that any one person might be selected is somewhere around 1 in 60 or worse (about 90,000 actual voters per Congressional district, maybe 1,500 people polled though probably fewer than that in a national election).
On the other hand, if you (like me) live in one of the many safe districts (and most of you do), then there is NO chance that you or I will ever see an exit pollster: not much point in sampling that vote because it will not be representative of the whole vote.
What about people who vote absentee in unsafe districts? An exit poll will never be able to sample them and absentee ballots grow in popularity every election.
Just like back in Saigon! Eh, slick?
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#42 2006-10-31 9:55 pm
- Farmerkev
- Official Dementor
- Moderator
- Registered: 2003-01-03
- Posts: 19131
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Here in IL in our Governor race the incumbent Dem has a 56 disapproval rating and the Rep challenger has a 57.
I'm thinking low turnout regardless.
I was so depressed last night thinking about the economy, wars, jobs, my savings, Social Security, retirement funds, etc., I called the Suicide Lifeline. I got a call center in Pakistan, and when I told them I was suicidal, they got all excited, and asked if I could drive a truck.
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#43 2006-10-31 10:14 pm
- gas huffer
- hegelian diuretic

- Registered: 2004-03-20
- Posts: 876
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
When I came home today I had a "consumer alert" waiting for me on my answering machine that was filled with some lovely slander about a politician.
Man, I'm already looking forward to November 8th.
"What's your favorite beer, son?"
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#44 2006-10-31 11:18 pm
- Tetrachloride
- ❖ ❖ ❖

- Registered: 2001-01-29
- Posts: 7150
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
gas huffer wrote:
Man, I'm already looking forward to November 8th.
Strangely, so am I. 
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#45 2006-11-01 12:34 am
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Me either but I going to the polling place on the 7th anyways. I only live a block from the polling place and like any good smurf I have opinions.
Personally, those slander calls end up as lost votes.
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#46 2006-11-01 1:15 am
- D'Eyncourt
- OMGDICTATOR

- Registered: 2001-12-27
- Posts: 9011
- Website
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Steyr AUG wrote:
D'Eyncourt wrote:
Steyr AUG wrote:
[snip]
By all means, explain how you can get a representative sample of voters when not everyone has an equal chance of being polled?Because sampling is just that: a sample of the total vote. Even if you live in a voting district that is considered a bellweather for sampling, the chances that any one person might be selected is somewhere around 1 in 60 or worse (about 90,000 actual voters per Congressional district, maybe 1,500 people polled though probably fewer than that in a national election).
On the other hand, if you (like me) live in one of the many safe districts (and most of you do), then there is NO chance that you or I will ever see an exit pollster: not much point in sampling that vote because it will not be representative of the whole vote.What about people who vote absentee in unsafe districts? An exit poll will never be able to sample them and absentee ballots grow in popularity every election.
THAT, of course, is a completely different question. Should absentee ballots skew the sample, then presumably other methods will be used, either to compensate or to substitute for exit polling.
But do you understand why not everyone doesn't need to be polled for a sample to be taken?
BOYCOTT SONY
"In fact, the polygraph looks for spikes in blood pressure, heart rate, respiration and perspiration. In other words, you can’t tell a lie from the sex act."--Robert L. Park, What's New for January 15, 2010
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#47 2006-11-01 1:23 am
- Freakout Jackson
- Meme-free

- From: ::moderated like a mo-fo::
- Registered: 2001-08-21
- Posts: 6592
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
.....but if we take absentee ballots into account we get the opinions of people who don't drive!
That will TOTALLY skew the results of the poll so it's all bullsmurf.
"The two symbols of the Republican Party: an elephant, and a big fat white guy who is threatened by change." - Seth MacFarlane
I couldn't deal with a clone of myself. I would probably kill him inside a week, and tell the police it was justifiable homisuicide, and tell them to sit around and hang out with me for a week to show them why. ~ Dan
Online
#48 2006-11-01 2:10 am
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
D'Eyncourt wrote:
resedit wrote:
jerwin wrote:
exit polling?
You know - not once have I ever been at a place where there was exit polling being done.
Seems to me that if you don't "exit pole" everywhere, your "exit poles" have opportunity for bias.
Also seems to me that some people may vote one way in private, and say they voted another when asked in public.Wow. You really do not understand statistics, do you?
Yes. I do.
Where you take the exit polls may be representative of the sample of THAT polling station - of voters that happen to respond to the exit poll at the times the exit polls are done. Different demographics vote at different times and at different polling stations (as they live in different areas) - not to mention the fact that different demographics also have different turnout ratios.
When you decide where to do your exit polls, you are creating a biased result. It may be biased towards the norm or it may be biased towards an extreme, but it is biased.
There are two kinds of people who keep rattlesnakes.
Those who have been bit, and those who will be bit. - Al Wolf.
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#49 2006-11-01 2:16 am
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
Freakout Jackson wrote:
.....but if we take absentee ballots into account we get the opinions of people who don't drive!
That will TOTALLY skew the results of the poll so it's all bullsmurf.
I don't drive and I don't use absentee. Polling stations are suppose to close to where you live.
IMHO absentee ballots serve to purposes -
1) Legitimate - the voter is not going to be in the their designated precinct. That's what they exist for.
2) Not Legitimate - the voter is a lazy ass smurf who votes early and thus does not benefit from the full public discussion of the measures on the ballot. There's no excuse for this, things can come to light between the time you cast your vote and the actual election day - not to mention the fact that sometimes candidates die (I think that actually happened a last election).
There are two kinds of people who keep rattlesnakes.
Those who have been bit, and those who will be bit. - Al Wolf.
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#50 2006-11-01 2:20 am
Re: 2006 election hijinks allegations, and also "push polls"
btw, about exit polls - do you think it is easier to tamper with the actual election or the exit polls?
Just sayin ...
There are two kinds of people who keep rattlesnakes.
Those who have been bit, and those who will be bit. - Al Wolf.
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