“they built the country, the reason our economy is growing”
Joe Biden
I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
Looks like Washoe County's live stream, which has been showing 4 angles of the ballot counting rooms, did go dark last night at 11:24p and stayed dark until just before 8a this morning.
— Ben Margiott (@BenMargiott) November 10, 2022
We've reached out to Washoe County to ask what happened. https://t.co/MsWJi7lKzE pic.twitter.com/i9fdMAnTyZ
hokie, the fact that you make the statement in bold indicates just how effective media bias is in establishing opinions.hokiewolf said:I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
To me, the latter two have a much greater impact than media bias.
considering I haven't watched mainstream media in years I'm not sure if that's something that is being discussed.PackFansXL said:hokie, the fact that you make the statement in bold indicates just how effective media bias is in establishing opinions.hokiewolf said:I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
To me, the latter two have a much greater impact than media bias.
I'll never understand why people are surprised that Democrats get more votes from mail in ballots when the Republican candidates spend the weeks leading up to the election actively telling their base to not mail their ballots in and either deliver them in person or vote in person on election day.Werewolf said:
hokiewolf said:
Just because he tells you the truth, and not what you want to hear does not make him a hack. And the book is really good. I enjoyed it.
But yet you can recite almost verbatim their talking points and often do repeatedly......once again, your tendencies for playing loose with the truth come back to bite you.hokiewolf said:considering I haven't watched mainstream media in years I'm not sure if that's something that is being discussed.PackFansXL said:hokie, the fact that you make the statement in bold indicates just how effective media bias is in establishing opinions.hokiewolf said:I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
To me, the latter two have a much greater impact than media bias.
I am curious why you believe Florida was so much more organized and pushed so effectively to get voters and identified and to the polls if you have been avoiding media for the past few weeks. Do you currently reside in Florida? How could you form an opinion on efforts in other states to make a relative comparison?hokiewolf said:considering I haven't watched mainstream media in years I'm not sure if that's something that is being discussed.PackFansXL said:hokie, the fact that you make the statement in bold indicates just how effective media bias is in establishing opinions.hokiewolf said:I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
To me, the latter two have a much greater impact than media bias.
Because they've been doing it since Jeb was Governor and Republicans outperformed in Florida. Ever since 2000, Florida has done a good job of organizing and getting folks out to vote, and then creating trust in the process by getting things counted quickly and accurately.PackFansXL said:I am curious why you believe Florida was so much more organized and pushed so effectively to get voters and identified and to the polls if you have been avoiding media for the past few weeks. Do you currently reside in Florida? How could you form an opinion on efforts in other states to make a relative comparison?hokiewolf said:considering I haven't watched mainstream media in years I'm not sure if that's something that is being discussed.PackFansXL said:hokie, the fact that you make the statement in bold indicates just how effective media bias is in establishing opinions.hokiewolf said:I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
To me, the latter two have a much greater impact than media bias.
Holy Sh-t!! 👀 pic.twitter.com/VqglagtRbm
— Chuck Callesto (@ChuckCallesto) November 11, 2022
hokie,hokiewolf said:Because they've been doing it since Jeb was Governor and Republicans outperformed in Florida. Ever since 2000, Florida has done a good job of organizing and getting folks out to vote, and then creating trust in the process by getting things counted quickly and accurately.PackFansXL said:I am curious why you believe Florida was so much more organized and pushed so effectively to get voters and identified and to the polls if you have been avoiding media for the past few weeks. Do you currently reside in Florida? How could you form an opinion on efforts in other states to make a relative comparison?hokiewolf said:considering I haven't watched mainstream media in years I'm not sure if that's something that is being discussed.PackFansXL said:hokie, the fact that you make the statement in bold indicates just how effective media bias is in establishing opinions.hokiewolf said:I think the influence of media has some impact, the bigger impacts are quality of candidates you are running as well as your efforts to get the vote out. Outside of Florida, I don't know of any other organized efforts in other states to identify voters and get them to the polls.PackFansXL said:Great! So, what is your answer to my question?hokiewolf said:it's a great book to understand how media bias came about and what we as consumers can do to combat it.PackFansXL said:hokie, thanks for the book recommendation.Quote:
I suggest you read this book: Broken News: Why the Media Rage Machine Divides America and How to Fight Back by Chris Stirewalt. It will help answer your question.
Since I haven't read this book, are you saying media messaging does not influence voters?
To me, the latter two have a much greater impact than media bias.
Combine that with the fact that there were good candidates in Florida who didn't do stupid stuff like "say there were some good things in the Unibombers manifesto".
Where I get my news:
- Wall Street Journal
- National Review
- The Dispatch
- I watch Brett Baer when I can
- podcasts
- Fox Business when I'm in the car
Since you don't want to change the electoral college, what supposed structural advantages do Republicans have? I have never heard of any such advantage.Civilized said:
I'm not arguing to change any rules. You've never heard me once advocate for elimination of the electoral college or a rethinking of the Virginia Compromise.
What would be awesome would be for many Republicans to stop being such whiners about the system being rigged.
There are real, quantifiable structural advantages for Republicans in the system.
Instead, some sizable proportion of the Republican electorate wants to obsess over fake election fraud and media bias when celebrity hangers-on candidates like Mehmet Oz don't get elected.
Republicans have plenty of advantages in the system. Focus on candidate quality instead of somehow blaming the media or Democrats when weak-sauce Pub candidates don't win their elections.
structurally, capitalism is better than socialism.PackFansXL said:Since you don't want to change the electoral college, what supposed structural advantages do Republicans have? I have never heard of any such advantage.Civilized said:
I'm not arguing to change any rules. You've never heard me once advocate for elimination of the electoral college or a rethinking of the Virginia Compromise.
What would be awesome would be for many Republicans to stop being such whiners about the system being rigged.
There are real, quantifiable structural advantages for Republicans in the system.
Instead, some sizable proportion of the Republican electorate wants to obsess over fake election fraud and media bias when celebrity hangers-on candidates like Mehmet Oz don't get elected.
Republicans have plenty of advantages in the system. Focus on candidate quality instead of somehow blaming the media or Democrats when weak-sauce Pub candidates don't win their elections.
Wow. In Arizona they discovered that some Republican ballots that were supposed to be counted after the tabulators failed ended up mixed in with ballots that were already counted instead.@KariLake put it best "Our elections are a circus being run by a bunch of clowns" pic.twitter.com/c8ZrbB1UFO
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) November 12, 2022
Werewolf said:Wow. In Arizona they discovered that some Republican ballots that were supposed to be counted after the tabulators failed ended up mixed in with ballots that were already counted instead.@KariLake put it best "Our elections are a circus being run by a bunch of clowns" pic.twitter.com/c8ZrbB1UFO
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) November 12, 2022
Elections are a joke....... and probably have been for maybe 20 or 30 years.packofwolves said:Werewolf said:Wow. In Arizona they discovered that some Republican ballots that were supposed to be counted after the tabulators failed ended up mixed in with ballots that were already counted instead.@KariLake put it best "Our elections are a circus being run by a bunch of clowns" pic.twitter.com/c8ZrbB1UFO
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) November 12, 2022
That has to mean a recount doesn't it? There is no way of determining which are already counted and which are not? Time to submit a lawsuit.
PROJECTED: Republican Joe Lombardo is projected to win the Nevada governor’s race. pic.twitter.com/pnTV6xenO4
— Nevada Independent (@TheNVIndy) November 12, 2022
NBC News projects Mark Finchem has lost in Arizona https://t.co/XqCkptQeUu pic.twitter.com/pjjZiHOl5f
— Citizen Free Press (@CitizenFreePres) November 12, 2022
From the Data Guru himself:
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 12, 2022
“The GOP cavalry is coming”
Buckle up, boys and girls.
It’s about to get fun! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/iufPIhroUb
Civilized said:
It's not a supposed electoral college bias, it's very real, albeit an advantage that ebbs and flows over time.
There are actually two notable current advantages for Republicans, in the Electoral College and in the Senate.
Re: the small-state advantage, larger, more populous states have the same number of senators as the more numerous, less populous states throughout the center of the country.
In rough numbers the 21 least populous states contain roughly the same number of people as the state of California. The 39 million people in those 21 states, most of which are Republican-leaning, have 42 votes in the Senate while the same number of people in California have just two. This allows for red states to exert control over Senate legislation in a manner disproportionate to their resident's proportion of the overall population.
Likewise, the electoral college enables anti-majority outcomes. It's how the winner of the popular vote lost the election in 2000 and in 2016. This is primarily due to key battleground states being more Republican-leaning than the country as a whole. There are various ways to quantify the advantage, but most of these metrics strongly agree that the 2016 and 2020 elections favored Republicans by a magnitude not seen since the 1940s.
While the small state Senate advantage has long favored Republicans, the electoral college advantage has vacillated back and forth between Dems and Pubs over the last century.
Importantly, even though both of these biases presently favor Republicans, I'm not for changing either. Part of what makes our democracy uniquely successful is its ability to adequately represent the political minority and avoid tyranny of the majority.
packgrad said:
Saw a tweet that said 52% of Fetterman's votes were mail in ballots. Anybody that doesn't see the problem there is just ignorant. Maybe it isn't true….
Werewolf said:From the Data Guru himself:
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 12, 2022
“The GOP cavalry is coming”
Buckle up, boys and girls.
It’s about to get fun! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/iufPIhroUb
The road to complete loss of the Republic is a short one from here if we don't get this stopped.caryking said:Werewolf said:From the Data Guru himself:
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 12, 2022
“The GOP cavalry is coming”
Buckle up, boys and girls.
It’s about to get fun! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/iufPIhroUb
What a sham?
We have "Late-Early Drop Offs". My trust in any election has wavered into the "Give me a break" category. That includes the ones that meet my favored results…. I just don't think we even know anymore…
caryking said:Werewolf said:From the Data Guru himself:
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 12, 2022
“The GOP cavalry is coming”
Buckle up, boys and girls.
It’s about to get fun! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/iufPIhroUb
What a sham?
We have "Late-Early Drop Offs". My trust in any election has wavered into the "Give me a break" category. That includes the ones that meet my favored results…. I just don't think we even know anymore…
At some point, Arizona needs to get it's **** together. Should never take this long to get the results, the longer it goes the more ppl are gonna question things. I know this is what you dems like, but all these mail in votes need to stop unless there are folks that can't physically get to the poles. Election Day should be Election Day.Packchem91 said:caryking said:Werewolf said:From the Data Guru himself:
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 12, 2022
“The GOP cavalry is coming”
Buckle up, boys and girls.
It’s about to get fun! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/iufPIhroUb
What a sham?
We have "Late-Early Drop Offs". My trust in any election has wavered into the "Give me a break" category. That includes the ones that meet my favored results…. I just don't think we even know anymore…
Meh, they have GOP and DEM observers in the Maricopa county counting room. I'm sure they're all on edge looking for a many sign of an issue. At some point, we have to accept that Trump's backers aren't going to win general elections unless special circumstances (like throwing $30mm into last weeks of OH).
jkpackfan said:At some point, Arizona needs to get it's **** together. Should never take this long to get the results, the longer it goes the more ppl are gonna question things. I know this is what you dems like, but all these mail in votes need to stop unless there are folks that can't physically get to the poles. Election Day should be Election Day.Packchem91 said:caryking said:Werewolf said:From the Data Guru himself:
— Kari Lake (@KariLake) November 12, 2022
“The GOP cavalry is coming”
Buckle up, boys and girls.
It’s about to get fun! 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/iufPIhroUb
What a sham?
We have "Late-Early Drop Offs". My trust in any election has wavered into the "Give me a break" category. That includes the ones that meet my favored results…. I just don't think we even know anymore…
Meh, they have GOP and DEM observers in the Maricopa county counting room. I'm sure they're all on edge looking for a many sign of an issue. At some point, we have to accept that Trump's backers aren't going to win general elections unless special circumstances (like throwing $30mm into last weeks of OH).