Then you have leaks, accurate or not, influencing people's voting behavior.I’d be fine with the results not being released until Election Day but being able to start counting earlier
Then you have leaks, accurate or not, influencing people's voting behavior.I’d be fine with the results not being released until Election Day but being able to start counting earlier
Don't the polls already do that?Then you have leaks, accurate or not, influencing people's voting behavior.
Yes, but I think crucially, they aren't an official result. Leaks (or "leaks") about an official result are much more powerful since they aren't a prediction about what is likely to happen but are ostensibly a report of what already has happened. The results of a Reuters/Ipsos poll still have to be tested against the actual election result where turnout can swing it one way or another. This may be less important if there exists mandatory voting, but in the United States that's not the case.Don't the polls already do that?
Disagree I have a political science lecturer who knew his shit on drones and works for the Pentagon. You can easily be a communicator with just the facts if you understand them.Me too, because our entire field is bad at what we do.
So who are you to lecture us about software? What is your profession?
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And now the news:
More evidence of fraud that you can ignore, and then turn around and say "there's no evidence!"
A CLOSE LOOK AT THE DATA - ARIZONA
Data science experts scrutinize the vote tallies and data from election night across the state of Arizona. Included is the raw data feed for this state, should you like to follow along and review forrumble.com
Data science experts scrutinize the vote tallies and data from election night across the state of Arizona. Included is the raw data feed for this state, should you like to follow along and review for yourself.
Define "stolen" and how that compares to what we see now. The only person who whined about fraud in 2016 was Donald Trump himself because his ego couldn't accept that he lost the popular vote. I can remember that Democrats complained about Russia campaigning for Trump, progressives complaining chosing Hillary as nominee got Trump elected and so forth. But none of these discredited the electoral process and actual vote count. Most people accepted Trump won, they were angry about it but they accepted it.It's your perspective that's broken. We've been told for years that the election was stolen. The 2016 election. Somehow that's not conspiracy theories and cognitive dissonance. What's the difference? Recounts and court appeals are perfectly normal aftermath in a presidential election. What isn't normal is this overblown reaction. In 2016, experts suggested Clinton should sue to challenge the entire electoral college system as unconstitutional. Is that a coup? Am I supposed to fear a military takeover of the country because people suggest ridiculous lawsuits? Why are you taking them so seriously? There were certainly people who suggested Obama would invoke martial law and refuse to leave office, and those people were rightly ignored as loonies. Do you want to be a loony?
You must surely see how meaningless these are. Self-description and a numerical graph with no indication of how it's measured?Your analysis is silly. I'm basically telling you exactly how he sees himself. Shall I quote him? [...]
And like, do you think his opinions are conservative? Shall we consult a graph?
It's a legal & constitutional principle in the US that voting should be reasonably accessible, not just a logistical issue for legislators to work out. And as such, ease-of-voting questions have always been open to judicial input.Quite the opposite. I think most of what they did was perfectly reasonable as policy. It was the method and the tone that caused problems. Like, I have no problem with the idea that there's a pandemic and people should be allowed to vote without congregating. That's fine. But it should be the legislature doing that. Well, they're in a spat with the governor (who's pandemic response is the worst executed policy I've ever seen. His lockdown was "here's a list of things we deem important enough to stay open and everything else closes" and the first draft neglected to include pharmacies), so bipartisan changes to the system weren't likely, and I appreciate that as well, BUT their decisions became silly. Everyone can mail in vote, even if its late, even if its late and we can't tell when it was mailed, even if its actually done in person early, everything's allowed. Republicans ask "well, if they're voting early, do we get to have poll watchers to maintain election transparency?" NAH. Polling places aren't open so the law says no poll watchers, because apparently the letter of the law starts mattering exactly when it pisses off Republicans.
It's not that rule changes weren't justified given the circumstance. It's that they were formulated as a giant middle finger to Republicans. A middle finger that was more important to them than the election or the pandemic or the state's laws they are tasked with.
No, it's basically true, as you demonstrate with your graph. The complication is more that the distinction of "conservative" and "liberal" is necessarily a gross simplification in terms of the Supreme Court: there are principles of jurisprudence which don't necessarily fit conventional political boxes. Also, of course, dependending on what those authors define as "conservative" and "liberal", because there's going to be a lot of devil in that detail.Your analysis is silly.
As a lesson in graph reading, your graph shows that he is conservative - just "less conservative" than the others. But isn't that my point?And like, do you think his opinions are conservative? Shall we consult a graph? He's practically the midpoint and moving that direction.
Of course. But there's a difference between a handful of cranks and talking heads punting theoretical long shots, and an official, concerted strategy to overthrow the election backed by the president himself, many state and national legislators, and even the weight of whole states (even if their suits lack standing). When you say "What isn't normal is this overblown reaction", that overblown reaction is nothing less than a formal, officially sanctioned attempt to declare fraud without evidence and scrap the election. That's a whole, massive new level of WTF?It's your perspective that's broken. We've been told for years that the election was stolen. The 2016 election.
Because the above. This isn't just a few calls in the wilderness. Large tracts of the Republican Party have, as a systematic strategy, decided to officially endorse the notion that the election was fraudulent (but only in selected key states), attempted to scrap the election in those states and hand over the decision to a partisan legislature.Why are you taking them so seriously?
Are we talking about Pennsylvania here? With its Republican-dominated House and Republican-dominated Senate, that formulated the rules "as a giant middle finger to Republicans"?It's not that rule changes weren't justified given the circumstance. It's that they were formulated as a giant middle finger to Republicans. A middle finger that was more important to them than the election or the pandemic or the state's laws they are tasked with.
No, he's just been ramming as many conservative judges into office as he can wherever there's a vacancy due to death and retirement, appointing by ideology ahead of competence.I don't know of any judges purged by Trump, or even a legal mechanism by which he could accomplish that.
I don't think Trump's base needed the help of anti Trump news, antifa or BLM to give everyone that impression.This year, we had a lot of last-minute rule changes due to covid, to say nothing of 5 years of anti-Trump propaganda, antifa and BLM riots that made everyone think that Republicans were nazis and deserved to be squashed by any means necessary.
As any good statistician ought to ask, what is the baseline for comparison? Without explicitly defining what that is and what it means, all you have is a picture with lines.
Fine. Enjoy. All the statistics behind that graph. I'm sure since you were so hardworking in figuring out the graph the first time, you'll be keen to read those papers.You must surely see how meaningless these are. Self-description and a numerical graph with no indication of how it's measured?
Not in PA. Not a crock at all. They opened "satellite election offices" in Philadelphia where you could show up, register, receive a ballot in person, fill it out, and immediately hand it in. Which is to say, they made early voting places. Then they denied the Trump campaign poll watchers under the argument that they weren't polling places.And Republicans were allowed poll-watchers. It's always been a crock that they weren't.
No, it isn't. That isn't your point. Your point was that he's a real conservative, and other Republicans are wacko. Unless you're demanding someone land exactly on the razor's edge at 0 to be considered effectively "independent", the graph isn't supporting you. And frankly, I don't think you believe what you're saying anyway. I think you're just running with anything that lets you further piss on Trump people, as is tradition.As a lesson in graph reading, your graph shows that he is conservative - just "less conservative" than the others. But isn't that my point?
The voting laws determined by the PA legislature were tossed aside. The courts made all the determinations. This is just ignorance on your part.Are we talking about Pennsylvania here? With its Republican-dominated House and Republican-dominated Senate, that formulated the rules "as a giant middle finger to Republicans"?
Forgive me, but where was I meant to start? The link denoted in the graph itself leads to a 404. And unless I'm missing something, neither of those links you provided actually contain the graph.Fine. Enjoy. All the statistics behind that graph. I'm sure since you were so hardworking in figuring out the graph the first time, you'll be keen to read those papers.
Right, so you're talking specifically about in-person absentee voting. Those votes aren't actually tabulated or counted until election day. Poll-watchers are supposed to be present to view the tabulation and counting process, so... that's perfectly consistent.Not in PA. Not a crock at all. They opened "satellite election offices" in Philadelphia where you could show up, register, receive a ballot in person, fill it out, and immediately hand it in. Which is to say, they made early voting places. Then they denied the Trump campaign poll watchers under the argument that they weren't polling places.
Pa. judge tosses Trump complaint over polling place restrictions
The president's lawsuit connected to his now-famous "Bad things happen in Philadelphia" quote has been rejected.whyy.org
I believe a responsible outlook would be "given the circumstances, these additional voting options will help people vote more safely, and we should allow them to exist with all the same transparency requirements we put on normal voting methods. But instead, they allowed things, and then said "neener, neener, neener, you can't see what we're doing", and amassed a pile a votes without oversight, which is exactly the pile of votes that flipped PA from very red to slightly blue overnight. I don't think those votes were inappropriate or fraudulent, but there'd be a hell of a lot less reason to think they were if Democrat judges weren't jerking off to themselves pissing off Trump.
1) If you actually want to check the methodolgy, they are comparing the justice's rulings partly against contemporary political debate. In essence, on their chart, a justice would become more "liberal" not because their views and rulings change, but because conservative politics becomes more extreme. (With respect to this, it's quite interesting that all the other justices become "more liberal" about the same time.)No, it isn't. That isn't your point. Your point was that he's a real conservative, and other Republicans are wacko. Unless you're demanding someone land exactly on the razor's edge at 0 to be considered effectively "independent", the graph isn't supporting you. And frankly, I don't think you believe what you're saying anyway. I think you're just running with anything that lets you further piss on Trump people, as is tradition.
It's not my problem or fault that the PA legislature could not get their arses in gear to make laws that passed muster.The voting laws determined by the PA legislature were tossed aside. The courts made all the determinations. This is just ignorance on your part.
The one below it doesn't disagree, it just ends 7 years sooner before most of that giant swing towards center.2) I'm guessing you cherry picked that graph off Wikipedia because it was convenient. I wonder why you didn't pick the one below it composed by another group.
It's your fault for not understanding the complaint. When the complaint is "the PA courts were abusing their power and disregarding the legislature to give Trump the middle finger" and your comeback is "well, the Republican led legislature wrote the rules", your comeback sucks.It's not my problem or fault that the PA legislature could not get their arses in gear to make laws that passed muster.
Typically, if you mean to enter an argument, you might want to start with an actual counterpoint. At this moment, I don't even know if you actually disagree with me, you're just claiming my presentation of information was insufficient.Forgive me, but where was I meant to start?
Oh, spare me. Criticism of a specious source is a perfectly valid point to raise.Typically, if you mean to enter an argument, you might want to start with an actual counterpoint. At this moment, I don't even know if you actually disagree with me, you're just claiming my presentation of information was insufficient.
How kind of the traitors to keep outing themselves.
I was responding a post that was just text of someone's opinion with no source or data. The vast majority of this board is posts with no source or data. It's not a specious source because you don't know where it came from. That's not what specious means. That's nearly the opposite of what specious means. You thought it looked wrong but actually it's backed by serious study. That's the opposite of specious.Oh, spare me. Criticism of a specious source is a perfectly valid point to raise.
I disagree with the late characterisation of traditional conservatives as "liberals" or "RINOs" for their refusal to go along with the utter clown-show that Trump has set up.
Don't forget they also believe opponents harvest the children's adrenochome to then drink and/or inject into their blood to prolong youth.How kind of the traitors to keep outing themselves.
Wait isn't she a Qanon freak as well? Yikes. Opposed to democracy and believing her opponents rape and eat children. Talk about a piece of work.
Your entire party's official strategy is to cast doubt on the reliability of the election, yet another unverifiable opinion can be thrown in the dustbin with the rest of them that Houseman's been unflaggingly hawking.It's your fault for not understanding the complaint. When the complaint is "the PA courts were abusing their power and disregarding the legislature to give Trump the middle finger" and your comeback is "well, the Republican led legislature wrote the rules", your comeback sucks.
So you're saying the election was so poorly run that whether or not there was fraud can't be verified?Your entire party's official strategy is to cast doubt on the reliability of the election, yet another unverifiable opinion can be thrown in the dustbin with the rest of them that Houseman's been unflaggingly hawking.
And Lizard people. QAnon believes in secret Lizard People.Don't forget they also believe opponents harvest the children's adrenochome to then drink and/or inject into their blood to prolong youth.