Learn2read
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That's slightly lower % over 70 than in the NYT/Edison exit polls
Age
18-29 (9%)
30-44 (19%)
45-64 (45%)
65 and older (27%)
Age
18-29 (9%)
30-44 (19%)
45-64 (45%)
65 and older (27%)
That's slightly lower % over 70 than in the NYT/Edison exit polls
Age
18-29 (9%)
30-44 (19%)
45-64 (45%)
65 and older (27%)
Speaks to why Paul did so poorly (overall).
I really want to see what Romney does if Newt becomes the nominee.
I would support a third party Paul candidacy over Newt or Obama. There, I said it.
I bet a Paul run could actually draw a pretty impressive amount of votes, possibly doing more to shift the GOP away from combo breaking ideals towards relative sanity as the results might demonstrate how little people want to vote for human piles of deceit. Think about the anti-war types, young libertarian voters, conspiracy nutjobs, and end the fed dudes all coalescing around Paul.
Hypothetically, if Ron Paul ran third-party and was polling in a distant third place but Newt and Obama were neck-and-neck, would you still vote for Ron Paul and risk Newt possibly getting into the white house? Because it might be possible that a third-party Ron Paul run gets a decent chunk of independent voters.
Hypothetically, if Ron Paul ran third-party and was polling in a distant third place but Newt and Obama were neck-and-neck, would you still vote for Ron Paul and risk Newt possibly getting into the white house? Because it might be possible that a third-party Ron Paul run gets a decent chunk of independent voters.
The Democrats should really start co-opting civil libertarian ideas.
I believe (and this is based purely on anecdotal evidence, but I've seen A LOT of that anecdotal evidence), that a lot of young people initially become libertarians because they (correctly) see no logic in continuing a drug war, banning gambling or prostitution, or passing any kind of morality/religious-based legislation.
The problem arises when these people start meeting full-blown libertarians who convince them to support a flat tax, removing the minimum wage, etc.
Offer a civil libertarian platform combined with logical (not Republican) economic ideas, and we could probably reduce the number of Ayn Rand assholes in the future.
I hate this retarded logic. "Bu-bu-but voting for anyone else is unrealistic!"
They sound a bit kooky, for sure
What's this about? Do you have a link?
Zach Edwards got started in web-based research while based in Las Vegas, Nevada in 2006 . After a stint as a part-time political blogger and local democratic volunteer, he joined the Obama campaign in early 2007 as an intern organizing North-West Las Vegas. In September 2007, Zach joined the Obama New Media department as co-director of the Nevada New Media team and then moved on to direct New Media operations in five other primary states (New Mexico, Texas, North Carolina, and South Dakota).
During the 2008 General Election, Zach was the Iowa Director of New Media. In this capacity, he worked closely with communications, research and field operations to provide cutting-edge organizing tools and new media-based opposition research; which was emulated in battleground states across the country. After the election, Zach began working at Link Strategies as the Director of New Media, where he provides innovative web-based research tools, video analysis and production, and web-based communication tools to assist our clients.
lol at "they don't want the contributions of the founders to be drowned by the criticisms".
They want as immaculate a depiction as they can get. Since when was the representation of the founding fathers dominated in any noticeable degree by the mention of slave-holding ? Huh ? Show me a scrap of validity for their concerns.
Unlike you, I have no special insight into what they actually want and or how that differs what what they say they want.
Nuts dude. It is going to be strange to see the forgone conclusion, Mitt Romney, fall from grace, if people keep falling for Newt's pile of shit.
Hey, so what is up with that Republican political operative getting arrested for stealing a Democratic politician's identity in order to frame him for ethics violations? That sounds like something that would be generating more buzz.
DES MOINES, Iowa -- A Des Moines man has been arrested after police say he used, or tried to use, the identity of Iowa Secretary of State Matt Schultz in a scheme to falsely implicate Schultz in perceived unethical behavior in office.
Zachary Edwards was arrested Friday and charged with identity theft.
The criminal complaint says Edwards fraudulently used or attempted to use the identity of Schultz or Schultz's brother with the intent to obtain a benefit. No other details were given.
Des Moines, IOWA --- Today, Friday, January 20, 2012, Zachary Edwards, age 29, from Des Moines, Iowa, was arrested and criminally charged with Identity Theft, an Aggravated Misdemeanor (Iowa Code 715A.8(2)). Edwards turned himself in to Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) agents this afternoon at the Polk County Jail. He was then booked into the jail with a set bail of $2,000, cash or surety.
According to the Criminal Complaint, on June 24, 2011, Edwards fraudulently used, or attempted to use, the identity of Iowa Secretary of State Matt Schultz and/or Secretary Schultzs brother, Thomas Schultz, with the intent to obtain a benefit, in an alleged scheme to falsely implicate Secretary Schultz in perceived illegal or unethical behavior while in office.
He was a member of the Council Bluffs City Council, a position he held from 2005 to 2011. On October 31, 2009, he announced his candidacy for the office of secretary of state and challenged incumbent Democrat Michael Mauro for the position. He won the election with 47% of the vote to Mauro's 45%[1] and took office in 2011.
A Des Moines man arrested Friday on charges he attempted to illegally use the identity of Iowa Secretary of State Matt Schultz had campaigned for President Barack Obama during the 2008 election cycle.
In addition, Zach Edwards, 29, was employed until Friday by a local political consulting firm well connected to Iowa Democrats.
Edwards was arrested on charges alleging he fraudulently used or attempted to use the identity of Schultz, a Republican, or Schultzs brother, Thomas, with the intent to obtain a benefit. The alleged scheme was intended to falsely implicate Secretary Schultz in perceived illegal or unethical behavior while in office, according to a news release from the Iowa Department of Public Safety.
...
Edwards had been employed since late 2008 as director of new media for Link Strategies, a Des Moines political consulting firm, with ties to Iowa Democrats, including U.S. Senator Tom Harkin.
Biographical information on Edwards found on the Link Strategies website says that Edwards worked in new media for the Obama campaign beginning in September 2007 after joining the campaign as an intern organizing in the Las Vegas area.
Jeff Link, president of Link Strategies, confirmed Saturday that Edwards no longer works for the company.
I am greatly disturbed by the charge brought against Zach, and understand the pending legal action will run its course, Link said.
He added that within hours of learning of this situation, I met with Zach and notified him he was no longer employed with Link Strategies effective immediately. After gathering further information it is clear the incident involved in the allegation was related to a personal action taken by Zach and unrelated to his work with Link Strategies.
Link also said his firm holds itself to a high bar of ethics and professionalism, and this type of activity is not acceptable and will not be tolerated.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/01/30/120130fa_fact_lizza?currentPage=allPolarization also has affected the two parties differently. The Republican Party has drifted much farther to the right than the Democratic Party has drifted to the left. Jacob Hacker, a professor at Yale, whose 2006 book, “Off Center,” documented this trend, told me, citing Poole and Rosenthal’s data on congressional voting records, that, since 1975, “Senate Republicans moved roughly twice as far to the right as Senate Democrats moved to the left” and “House Republicans moved roughly six times as far to the right as House Democrats moved to the left.” In other words, the story of the past few decades is asymmetric polarization.
Interesting read based on memos from the Obama White House.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/01/30/120130fa_fact_lizza?currentPage=all
Senate Republicans moved roughly twice as far to the right as Senate Democrats moved to the left and House Republicans moved roughly six times as far to the right as House Democrats moved to the left.
How in the world do you even quantify something like that?
How in the world do you even quantify something like that?
How in the world do you even quantify something like that?
It's in the book that the article cites, so you'll have to look there. Anyway, the sentiment is absolutely correct: Republicans have moved farther to the right than Democrats have to the left.How in the world do you even quantify something like that?
How in the world do you even quantify something like that?
It's in the book that the article cites, so you'll have to look there. Anyway, the sentiment is absolutely correct: Republicans have moved farther to the right than Democrats have to the left.
Have the Dems even moved to the left?
No portrayal of minority experience in the history which actually occurred shall obscure the experience or contributions of the Founding Fathers, or the majority of citizens, including those who reached positions of leadership.
is the exact quote.
Seems like an exaggeration to say that they want no mention of slavery at all. A more even-handed reading would take it to mean that they don't want the contributions of the founders to be drowned by the criticisms.
Furthermore, I don't see any indication that this is an official Tea Party position, only that a "couple dozen" Tea Party members are advocating for them.
They sound a bit kooky, for sure, but "Tennessee Tea Party Wants Slavery Removed From School Textbooks" is just a lie. Ironic considering that you link from a site that claims: "Addicting Info started as a resource to discredit all the lies and propaganda that the right-wing spreads."
Interesting read based on memos from the Obama White House.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2012/01/30/120130fa_fact_lizza?currentPage=all
It's in the book that the article cites, so you'll have to look there. Anyway, the sentiment is absolutely correct: Republicans have moved farther to the right than Democrats have to the left.
That's slightly lower % over 70 than in the NYT/Edison exit polls
Age
18-29 (9%)
30-44 (19%)
45-64 (45%)
65 and older (27%)
This is the part of the book that talks about it: http://books.google.com/books?id=wTpA2yrTrPsC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA25#v=onepage&q&f=false
Their source is the ANES: http://electionstudies.org/studypages/download/datacenter_all.htm
It is a good resource for numbers, but given the highly subjective nature of the topic, I find most attempts at quantifying such matters suspect. They attempt to normalize it somewhat by comparing the "activists" with the "middle" but again, given the highly subjective nature it doesn't really mean anything to me.
I hate that pollsters do it like this. 11 year range first bracket, then 14, then 19......and we all know they do this to make the differences look larger than they really are. (not referring to this poll specifically. Just in general)
There's approximately the same percentage of the population reflected in each age bracket. That's why they do that. There are a lot more 18-29 year-olds hanging around than 65-76 year-olds.
I'm not really sure how "even-handed" one needs to be with respect to stopping historical revisionism.No portrayal of minority experience in the history which actually occurred shall obscure the experience or contributions of the Founding Fathers, or the majority of citizens, including those who reached positions of leadership.
is the exact quote.
Seems like an exaggeration to say that they want no mention of slavery at all. A more even-handed reading would take it to mean that they don't want the contributions of the founders to be drowned by the criticisms.
Furthermore, I don't see any indication that this is an official Tea Party position, only that a "couple dozen" Tea Party members are advocating for them.
They sound a bit kooky, for sure, but "Tennessee Tea Party Wants Slavery Removed From School Textbooks" is just a lie. Ironic considering that you link from a site that claims: "Addicting Info started as a resource to discredit all the lies and propaganda that the right-wing spreads."
DW Nominate.How in the world do you even quantify something like that?
One or two more defeats and who knows what he's going to say....I think he's been dancing on eggs trying to find a version of Romney that will work."
-- Newt Gingrich, in an interview on Face the Nation, about GOP presidential rival Mitt Romney.
Newt really has a gift for the soundbyte: