Frustrated Incorporated
I just want something simple, like the TRUTH!

This post is in response to Jim Capatelli’s comment:

George W. Bush, (who became leader, illegally, like Saddam, without actually getting the people to vote for him)…

It’s about time to lay out the Truth about 2000. Get over it, if that’s possible.
Reference: John R. Lott Jr. – Dec 10 2003
Let the Sunshine In

Headlines this weekend recited the old line “Dems accuse Bush of stealing the 2000 election.” Former U.S. Representative Carrie Meek received a wildly enthusiastic response from delegates to the Florida Democratic convention with calls that “We should be ready for revenge!” Retired General Wesley Clark told delegates he fought for democracy and free elections in Vietnam and Europe only to see “the taking” of the presidency by Republicans in 2000. Senator John Edwards said, “We had more votes; we won!” Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts said: “None of us are going to forget.” More vaguely, Senator Joe Lieberman claimed that Bush “stretched the truth” to get his way in 2000. Of course, Terry McAuliffe was beating the same old drum. They should all get over it.

The stolen election supposedly incorporated many wrongs, but foremost was discrimination against Democratic African-American voters: Faulty voting machines were said to have thrown out their votes at higher rates. Also included are claims that the voters’ intent wasn’t properly divined, that Republicans on the Supreme Court felt compelled to covertly snatch the election, and that African-Americans were intimidated into not voting or were erroneously placed on the ineligible list at higher rates than other racial groups.

These charges have been rebutted before, but with so much misinformation and people’s short memories simply accepting the charges, many risk believing that they are true. There has also been new research – of which most people may not be aware – which helps replace myth with reality.

1. THE MYTH OF THE FLAWED VOTING MACHINES & DEMOCRATIC DISENFRANCHISEMENT

Suppose spoiled or non-voted ballots really did indicate disenfranchisement, rather than voter preferences. Then, according to the precinct-level vote data compiled by USA Today and other newspapers, the group most victimized in the Florida voting was African-American Republicans, and by a dramatic margin, too.

Earlier this year I published an article in the Journal of Legal Studies analyzing the USA Today data, and it shows that African-American Republicans who voted were 54 to 66 times more likely than the average African American to cast a non-voted ballot (either by not marking that race or voting for too many candidates). To put it another way: For every two additional black Republicans in the average precinct, there was one additional non-voted ballot. By comparison, it took an additional 125 African Americans (of any party affiliation) in the average precinct to produce the same result.

Some readers may be surprised that black Republicans even exist in Florida, but, in fact, there are 22,270 such registered voters – or about one for every 20 registered black Democrats. This is a large number when you consider that the election in the state was decided by fewer than 1,000 votes. Since these Republicans were more than 50 times more likely to suffer non-voted ballots than other African Americans, the reasonable conclusion is that George W. Bush was penalized more by the losses of African-American votes than Al Gore.

Democrats have also claimed that low-income voters suffered non-voted ballots disproportionately. Yet, the data decisively reject this conclusion. For example, the poorest voters, those in households making less than $15,000 a year, had non-voted ballots at less than one-fifteenth the rate of voters in families making over $500,000.

It is difficult to believe that wealthy people were more confused by the ballot than poor people. Perhaps the rich or black Republicans simply did not like the choices for president and so did not vote on that part of the ballot. Perhaps there was tampering, but it is difficult to see how it could have been carried out and covered up. We may never know, but, clearly, the figures show that income and race were only one-third as important in explaining non-voted ballots as the methods and machines used in voting. For example, setting up the names in a straight line appears to produce many fewer problems than listing names on different pages or in separate columns.

2. THE MYTH THAT AFRICAN AMERICANS WERE INCORRECTLY PLACED ON THE CONVICTED-FELONS LIST AT A HIGHER RATE THAN OTHER GROUPS

The evidence on convicted felons comes from the U.S. Civil Rights Commission’s Majority Report, which states: “The chance of being placed on this list [the exclusion list] in error is greater if the voter is African-American.” The evidence they provide indicates that African-Americans had a greater share of successful appeals. However, since African-Americans also constituted an even greater share of the list to begin with, whites were actually the most likely to be erroneously on the list (a 9.9-percent error rate for whites versus only a 5.1-percent error rate for blacks). The rate for Hispanics (8.7 percent) is also higher than for blacks. The Commission’s own table thus proves the opposite of what they claim. A greater percentage of whites and Hispanics who were placed on the disqualifying list were originally placed there in error.

In any case, this evidence has nothing to do with whether people were in the end improperly prevented from voting, and there are no data presented on that point. The Majority Report’s evidence only examines those who successfully appealed and says nothing about how many of those who didn’t appeal could have successfully done so.

3. THE MYTH THAT GORE WOULD HAVE WON IF RECOUNT HAD ONLY BEEN ALLOWED

There were two news consortiums conducting massive recounts of Florida’s ballots. One group was headed by USA Today and the Miami Herald. The other one was headed by eight newsgroups including the Washington Post, New York Times, L.A. Times, Chicago Tribune, the Associated Press, and CNN. Surprisingly, the two groups came to very similar conclusions. To quote from the USA Today group’s findings (May 11, 2001) on different recounts:

Who would have won if Al Gore had gotten the manual counts he requested in four counties? Answer: George W. Bush.

Who would have won if the U.S. Supreme Court had not stopped the hand recount of undervotes, which are ballots that registered no machine-readable vote for president? Answer: Bush, under three of four standards.

Who would have won if all disputed ballots – including those rejected by machines because they had more than one vote for president – had been recounted by hand? Answer: Bush, under the two most widely used standards; Gore, under the two least used.

Of course, Florida law provided no mechanism to ask for a statewide recount a la the last option, only county-by-county recounts. And of course neither Gore’s campaign nor the Florida Supreme Court ever asked for such a recount.

4. DON’T FORGET THE EARLY MEDIA CALL

Florida polls were open until 8 P.M. on election night. The problem was that Florida’s ten heavily Republican western-panhandle counties are on Central, not Eastern, time. When polls closed at 8 P.M. EST in most of the state, the western-panhandle polling places were still open for another hour. Yet, at 8 Eastern, all the networks (ABC, CBS, CNN, FOX, MSNBC, and NBC) incorrectly announced many times over the next hour that the polls were closed in the entire state. CBS national news made 18 direct statements that the polls had closed.

Polling conducted after the election indicates that the media had an impact on voter behavior, and that the perception of Democratic wins discouraged Republican voters. Democratic strategist Bob Beckel concluded Mr. Bush suffered a net loss of up to 8,000 votes in the panhandle after Florida was called early for Gore. Another survey of western-panhandle voters conducted by John McLaughlin & Associates, a Republican polling company, immediately after the election estimated that the early call cost Bush approximately 10,000 votes.

Using voting data for presidential elections from 1976 to 2000, my own own empirical estimates that attempted to control for a variety of factors affecting turnout imply that Bush received as many as 7,500 to 10,000 fewer votes than he would normally have expected. Little change appears to have occurred in the rate that non-Republicans voted.

Terry McAuliffe clearly stated his strategy “to use the anger and resentment that will come out of that 2000 election, put it in a positive way to energize the Democratic base.” Democrats have used the notion that Bush is an illegitimate president to justify everything from their harsh campaign rhetoric to their filibusters against his judicial appointments.

More could be said about these myths, but most of them hardly merit discussion. Unfortunately, as Terry McAuliffe implies, these falsehoods will continue to be trumpeted frequently over the next year; thankfully, a few facts can help dispel them.

Let the Sunshine In

Too ALL who still argue this… Enough is enough, find another excuse or prove it. Facts do matter!

This is a FoxNews.com story:

“A Michigan congressman wants to put a 50-cent tax on every gallon of gasoline to try to cut back on Americans’ consumption. Polls show that a majority of Americans support policies that would reduce greenhouse gases. But when it comes to paying for it, it’s a different story.” We’re talking about John Dingell, Democrat-Michigan. He “wants to help cut consumption with a gas tax but some don’t agree with the idea…”

I don’t care who agrees with it and who doesn’t.

This is who Democrats are: raise your taxes, cut down on your liberty and freedom; under the guise, in this case, of reducing consumption and saving the planet.

This whole idea of consumption… “Well, I really believe we need to conserve. People are using too much gasoline, and we gotta cut back for pollution and global warming and so forth.”

Well, count me in! I’m all for conservation. But not as a means of growth.

This is a growth economy.

Look at the economic circumstances that we face right now. Regardless the reality, the perception among a lot of Americans is that the economy is heading toward recession, is it not? And are they happy with that? Are they?

Do you find people saying, “Oh, well, great. The economy is slowing down. Well, that’s really good. That means I’ll use less gasoline and I’ll use less heating oil and I won’t have as much money to go to the movies. I want the economy to slow.”

No!

People are demanding the economy pick up. People are demanding that wages go up. People are demanding more opportunity. The dangerous thing is, they’re demanding the government do this, because they want a quick fix, rather than let the market take care of itself.

You know, markets go up, markets go down, markets correct, but people are impatient. Primarily, the impatience is due to this never-ending barrage the last five years or longer from the media, about how horrible the economy is, how rotten it is.

Democrats don’t help by talking about their vision of America as soup-line America. So people want what? They want the economy to revive?

What will that require? That will require growth, will it not?

Let me ask. In the middle of… Let’s just assume for the sake of this example, that we are in a recession. Do you think conserving is going to get us out of it? Will conserving — buying less gasoline, spending less money — get us out of the recession, or if it’s not a recession, out of a slow down?

Of course not.

Growth. The American people demand it. We have the greatest lifestyle, the highest standard of living of any human beings on the face of the earth. We have more prosperity, more opportunity, but most people don’t look at it that way, because they’ve grown up as Americans, they have expectations based on their life and what they expect the country to be and that’s why downturns are not tolerated. They just aren’t.

“I don’t care how the rest of the world lives! I demand a good economy. I demand a better future for my kids than I had for myself.” Fine. I agree totally. But you’re not going to do it by taxing gasoline 50 cents a gallon and driving less. You’re not going to do it with the concept of no growth. You’re not going to get out of any economic malaise.

Can you get a raise without any growth in your company’s business? Of course not!

Conservation is fine and dandy, conservation is cool, but don’t substitute it for growth — and that’s, unfortunately, what the left is talking about. That’s what Dingell’s 50-cents-per-gallon tax increase on gasoline is. It’s conservation, and they’re appealing to your guilt because your driving, “is destroying the world and endangering the polar bears, melting the arctic ice.” Meanwhile, none of the hoax that’s being propounded is actually factually true.

But regardless of that, don’t fall for the conservation bit alone as a way to continue to maintain current levels of prosperity and grow them, because conservation cannot do that.

Related Post: MICHIGAN: one-state recession; Whipping dog of the Democrats

This post is in response to Jim Capatelli and his comment left on Post :THE BEGINNING…Why I do, what I do. I find this comment unbelievable, and wish to address it thoroughly.

Author : Jim Capatelli (IP: 24.19.42.61 , c-24-19-42-61.hsd1.mn.comcast.net)

E-mail : mailto:juliosoy@yahoo.com

on March 13, 2008 @10:30

BELOW IS Jim Capatelli – POST (IN FULL) TO MY ARTICLE: (more…)

You know, today’s the fifth anniversary of going to war in Iraq, and I listened to Barack Obama and I listened to Clinton and all the other Democrats trash President Bush, and I got to thinking…
I wish that Senator Obama were as tolerant of our president as he is his pastor.

Do you realize the things that Obama and Clinton and all these Democrats have said about George W. Bush the last five years? There has been no tolerance, and there has been no attempt to understand, and there has been no attempt at unity.

In all this talk about Obama being the unifying candidate, go find one instance where he’s reached across the aisle as a Senator in a bipartisan way to promote unity.

It’s all a smoke screen, and it’s a mask. But wouldn’t it be great, from the candidate talking unity and talking tolerance, if he were as tolerant of George Bush as he is of his minister.

Another Liberal problem… followers, not leaders. – IMHO – FACT.

Ronald Reagan had the American people behind him, and the American people in this country get what they want.

Now, you might want to say that Reagan united the people, but he did it on the basis of policy. He did it on the basis of his personality. He did it on the basis of his patriotism. He changed people’s minds, but he didn’t change the minds of Democrats in Congress. They had no choice.

They had to go along, and not on everything did they. You remember the Iran-Contra situation and the Boland amendment and everything they could do in the second term to undermine Ronald Reagan. They hated those tax cuts being passed, and they did everything they could to do to undermine him after that.

Yet they got it done. It wasn’t with “unity.” It was by perseverance, the idea triumphing in the minds of as many people as possible, leading a movement, teaching and explaining. Leadership.

It’s what’s absent today in both sides of this in the presidential race. We have no leadership from Clinton. Obama’s not a leader. McCain’s not a leader. These are politicians seeking a promotion, pure and simple.

We don’t have leadership. And that’s why everybody’s filled with angst. It’s just sad — but it is, what it is.

So we get all this talk about unity, and we can’t get anything done without unity, and who is it that’s saying this? Liberal Democrats.

Well, I’m sure they would love to us to unify with them, by giving up what we believe, by compromising on our principles. Sure…
They love that kind of unity!

Reference previous post:
Conservative / Liberals – Basics 101