Pretending to be what you’re not:
They probably should have blurred out the giraffes’ faces. Bottoms. Tails.
Whatevers.
Pretending to be what you’re not:
They probably should have blurred out the giraffes’ faces. Bottoms. Tails.
Whatevers.
Obscurantist:
If you describe something as obscurantist, you mean that it is deliberately vague and difficult to understand, so that it prevents people from finding out the truth about it.
I think that a lot of poetry published today is obscurantist nonsense. [Collins Dictionary]
Ah. Noted in “The battle for George Orwell’s soul,” Ed West, The Wrong Side of History:
For Lynskey, Trump and Trumpism is the obvious analogy. The American Caesar meets most criteria of Orwell’s definition of fascism: ‘something cruel, unscrupulous, arrogant, obscurantist, anti-liberal and anti-working-class… almost any English person would accept “bully” as a synonym for “Fascist”.’
A neat little article.
For those who still use televisions, it turns out there’s a security hole when you plug in your computer, according to NewScientist (5 October 2024, paywall):
Popular smart TV models can take multiple snapshots of what you are watching every second or upload audio snippets of viewed content – possibly even when they are being used as external displays for your laptop or video game console.
Smart TV manufacturers use these frequent screenshots or audio clips in their automatic content recognition systems, which track viewing habits in order to target people with specific advertising. But researchers showed this tracking by some of the world’s most popular smart TV brands – Samsung TVs can take screenshots every 500 milliseconds and LG TVs upload 10-millisecond audio samples of viewed content – can occur when people least expect it.
“When a user connects their laptop via HDMI just to browse stuff on their laptop on a bigger screen by using the TV as a ‘dumb’ display, they are unsuspecting of their activity being screenshotted,” says Yash Vekaria at the University of California, Davis. An LG spokesperson disputed this scenario, and Samsung did not respond to a request for comment. …
[Vekaria and his team] found the smart TVs did not appear to upload any screenshots or audio data when streaming from Netflix or other third-party apps, mirroring YouTube content streamed on a separate phone or laptop or when sitting idle. But the smart TVs did upload data when showing broadcasts from the TV antenna or content from an HDMI-connected device.
That’s an unpleasant thought. While sheer volume might slow passive security breaches, this is certainly something to keep in mind.
If you own a television.
Retcon:
Retroactive continuity is a literary device in which previously established information in a work of fiction is changed, ignored, or contradicted to suit the current story.
Called a “retcon” for short, it’s mostly seen in works of serial fiction, such as comics and television series. [TCK Publishing]
Noted in “Trump drops the pretense, labels Jan. 6 insurrectionists ‘we’,” Aaron Blake, WaPo:
In the intervening four years [since the January 6th, 2021 insurrection riot], though, Trump himself has expressed an increasing amount of sympathy for the rioters — not just for their humanity and purported legal persecution (he has repeatedly floated pardons), but also for their actions. He has clearly sought to retcon that day from one of national shame to one that is to be, in many ways, celebrated.
Early voting, you’d think, would indicate one side or the other has enthused its voters to get out to the polls, or mail absentee ballots, as soon as possible to avoid the ooopsie-blues of forgetting to vote.
But what about this? Here’s right-wing pundit Erick Erickson:
… yesterday eclipsed a new record for early voting in Georgia with 300,000 people going to the polls. While it’s impossible to definitively extrapolate which candidate is in the lead, one thing is clear. All of the data says that Trump’s advantage comes from low-propensity voters who don’t vote consistently. If turnout remains high, this is a really good sign for Republicans.
On the other hand, the left is convinced early turnout will reflect voters for their side. Here’s a random selection from Daily Kos, mostly picked because it’s to hand and not because it’s convincing – it’s limp in that regard:
Just a quick happy note to say that in the 24 years I have lived here, I have never seen an early voting line as long as I did this morning at 10:30 am. If you don’t know Carrboro, NC we are adjacent to Chapel Hill and 90% Harris voters.
So who’s right? I can better see the argument that voters outraged by Dobbs have gone to the polls early in order to vote against any Republicans they feel are responsible for restricting their abortion and other reproductive health choices. It’s existential, and that grabs the attention of voters, at least those that place their own lives above theological restraints – keeping in mind that many religions do not restrict abortion, or at least have reasonable restrictions.
Erickson doesn’t cite his source for All of the data says that Trump’s advantage comes from low-propensity voters who don’t vote consistently, nor is the causal chain of such a conclusion obvious, so my evaluation doesn’t lean that way.
I could be wrong, of course.
But, at least for some commentators, not necessarily those I quoted, there may be outright lying going on because a disheartened voter may transition to a non-voter. Why spend the time and put forth the effort in a spasm of futility? But the disheartened voter may not be justified in that transition; get every single one of them together, and victory might still be gained.
Or so the thinking goes.
We won’t know for sure until state-level returns come in, and even then it’ll depend on what’s reported.
Tuesday I had my Covid-19 booster, and Wednesday has been miserable. Here’s the previous campaign update, back when I was fun and memorable.
Just after publishing my last update, I ran across “18 Reasons To Be Bullish About The Election,” by GoodNewsRoundup on Daily Kos, and their third reason is “Ignore the red wave polling.” Yeah, doesn’t really work with their title, but the information is still good, even if it’s not new, excepting the specifics. I encourage you to read it, even if the style of the progressives grates on your nerves. Money quote:
[A]n example: Yesterday I saw a diary here about a poll from American Greatness. It was a PA poll that showed Harris up 4 in registered voters but down 1.5 to trump in likely voters.
That is odd.
I wasn’t the only one who thought that. Aaron Astor (a professor at Maryville College) looked into it and the poll all but removed Philadelphia from the LV totals.
Weird!
Maybe a mistake?
Daniel Nichanian. Editor-in-chief and founder of @BoltsMag contacted the pollster to let them know about the mistake and IT WASNT A MISTAKE.
They claim that nearly the entire sample of registered voters from Philadelphia were unlikely to vote. (Despite 75% of them saying they were “very likely to vote.”)
Keep your eye on the raw data and not the predigested pap. Like I said, go out and vote! Encourage friends and family to vote. And remember, to quote former Governor Ventura (I-MN), This isn’t a horse race! It doesn’t matter that you voted for the winner or the loser, there are no points for voting on that basis. Negative points for misunderstanding democracy, really. Pick out the person who has the best character, because this is a character election, and vote for them. That’s how to do your best to ensure Democracy continues.
If you really need more reassurance, you can try this, also on Daily Kos.
Voter Awareness Boosts Pinkins’ Numbers
The survey reveals Roger Wicker initially leading by 13 points over Ty Pinkins. However, Wicker’s broader unfavorability rate stands at 36%, surpassing his 26% favorability. Conversely, Pinkins, while lesser-known, achieves a positive net favorability, 12% favorability against a 9% unfavorability.
After voters read candidate biographies, the electoral gap narrows. Wicker’s support slightly increases to 50%, while Pinkins gains ground at 40%, reducing the gap to 10 points. By the final ballot, the gap closes further to just a 5-point striking distance, with Wicker at 47% and Pinkins at 42%.
The problem, of course, is that handing out biographies at voting booths is probably illegal and fruitless. Pinkins needs to communicate how he differs from Wicker now. I think I shall disregard this poll. There are too many unknowns and it doesn’t taste right.
… Hawley (who is running unopposed for the GOP nomination next month) adds to the reasons Missourians should help hold that line. From his political and personal culpability for the events of Jan. 6, 2021, to his insincere populist showboating on the Senate floor, to his outrageous recent defense of Christian nationalism, Hawley has been a frequently embarrassing senator for Missouri — and not an especially effective one. With recent polls showing Hawley with a single-digit lead over Kunce in a state Trump won by 16 points in 2020, Democrats may in fact have the opportunity for an upset here. They also have an opportunity to seat a senator the state could finally be proud of.
That’s more or less a slap upside the head of Senator Hawley (R-MO). But it doesn’t mean Kunce will win. That’s up to the Missouri citizens.
Presumably, this pollster doesn’t skew results, so Rep Allred needs to continue to get his message out there.
I’m finding these details interesting:
Candidate | Republicans | Democrats | Independents |
---|---|---|---|
Fischer | 72% | 4% | 23% |
Osborn | 22% | 94% | 69% |
Fischer has sprung leaks among both her fellow Republicans and the Independents, and Osborn is leading in both men and women with 50% of each, while Fischer is only getting 41% of women, and 47% of men. It appears Dobbs is having an effect in this race, although perhaps not of the magnitude I was generally hoping for.
Public polling generally shows the GOP incumbent with small but steady leads over Rep. Colin Allred, a well-liked Texas Democrat and former NFL star. But private polling is causing fresh anxieties for Cruz and his party: Politico reported this week that the latest round of polling from the Senate Leadership Fund, the Senate Republicans’ top super PAC, found Cruz’s advantage over Allred “slipping … from 3 points in mid-September to 1 point in October.”
“Most hated member of the Senate” is a paraphrased quote I’ve run across numerous times over the years in relationship to Senator Cruz. Both sides may cheer if he’s replaced. Albeit in a muted way.
I have started discarding polls, because I hope readers now understand that some don’t deserve to exist. Such pollsters as ActiVote, SoCal Strategies, Patriot Polling (1.1), Trafalgar Group (0.7!), and Redfield & Wilton Strategies were on the list.
We’re now less than three weeks out on the terminus of the Senate campaigns, and I continue to have hopes. Senator Fischer’s (R-NE) looming disaster in Nebraska has been a complete surprise; if Mr Kunce can pressure Senator Hawley (R-MO), perhaps beating him, that would rival the shocker in Nebraska. The Florida and Texas races, despite the shock expressed by the longtime media, is less surprising, given the abrasiveness and darker qualities of the incumbents. And Montana? The willingness to throw away a competent and respected member of the Senate in favor of a businessman whose business is failing, and has multiple scandals, would be a shocking commentary on the Montana electorate. If that happens. Pollster reputations are on the line in Montana.
That blasted cat brought in a mouse, now I have to wonder where it went. Until next time…
In this thread on the company represented by stock symbol DJT, my last look showed a company on its way off the cliff, but now it’s a company that’s been rescued – by the invisible hand of someone. Last time I discussed this, DJT’s price/sh was around $14. That was around September 20. Now?
Just short of a double. A reward for the inveterate risk taker and for those willing to bet on the invisible hand of President Putin and others in his league, looking to buy Mr Trump’s favor, should he win the Presidential race, by pumping up the price of something Mr Trump owns, and lots of: DJT stock.
Over on Daily Kos, tjlord wonders if he does still own it:
While no one was watching almost 90 million shares of DJT changed hands today [October 15th]. That would be almost 80% of DonOld’s entire holdings. So much that the exchange stopped trading in the stock for a short period due to the abnormal trading volume.
The last week has seen the DJT stock price rise over 50%. The trading volume also went from around 15 — 20 million shares a day to more like 30 — 45 million a day.
That is congruent with stock manipulation by one party, reinforced by other parties buying on the rising price as a signal of good news.
What news?
Mr Trump’s cryptocurrency venture is close to coming online.
But does that justify a doubling of price?
Not really. Today, well, October 15th, in fact, it lost roughly 10%. If I see it come crashing back down then I’ll assume the run-up was artificial.
To be clear, I have no intention of ever trying to take advantage of DJT, long or short, puts or calls, cries to Satan or thanks to God. It’s simply instructive to watch, in what amounts to a post-Roman Senate world of corruption and self-interest.
It’s worth noting that cryptocurrency folks working to make cryptocurrency acceptable might want to start shuddering in fear. Everything Mr Trump touches turns to waste because of his incessant greed. If a number of folks lose money on this venture, it may leave the cryptocurrency industry in flames.
If you’re concerned about election board chaos in Georgia, here’s Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney:
McBurney ruled Monday that certification of election results is a mandatory duty irrespective of any concerns that a county election board may have about the accuracy of the count. Such concerns are the domain of prosecutors and state election officials, he ruled, and local boards are expected to relay any evidence of irregularity to their local district attorney.
The ruling sends a signal to county election officials across the state who have hesitated to certify results. It also has the potential to affect several other rules approved this year by the State Election Board, including one that permits county boards to investigate irregularities and that critics fear could allow them to delay results. [WaPo]
In other words, stop horsing around and follow the rules. Other people have the responsibility of investigating irregularities.
Hey, don’t look to me for some fabulous, fantastical answer.
But it’s the most important question in the world.
The whole thing is premised on faith. On a belief about how the world works.
— David Stockman, businessman, Republican U.S. Represenative, Director of the Office of Management and Budget (1981–1985) on supply side economics.
But “thing” can represent any proposed social plan, from how to organize your church to how to run a baseball stadium.
Anything.
It’s the most important unspoken question in the world.
Nootropic:
The term “nootropics” first referred to chemicals that met very specific criteria. But now it’s used to refer to any natural or synthetic substance that may have a positive impact on mental skills. In general, nootropics fall into three general categories: dietary supplements, synthetic compounds, and prescription drugs. [WebMD]
Ah. Noted in “The Science Behind Nootropics – Do They Actually Work?” Gabe Allen, Discover:
Nootropic supplement companies pitch an attractive solution. What if you could take a pill (or powder or gummy candy) that would make your brain function better in our technology-mediated world? Something that would help you focus on what is important, remember the right details and block out the noise. The nootropic industry is already worth more than $2 billion and is expected to double in size in the next decade, according to one report.
But, unlike prescription nootropics like Adderall or Ritalin, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration doesn’t highly regulate nootropic supplements. In many cases, American consumers must rely on the companies they buy from for information.
Rep MT Greene (R-GA) puts out an apparently outrageous tweet:
Yes they can control the weather.
It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done.
— Marjorie Taylor Greene 🇺🇸 (@mtgreenee) October 4, 2024
Yes they can control the weather.
It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be done.
Yes, very silly. But her own Party’s response helps reveal an unspoken nuance:
Florida Rep. Carlos Gimenez, for example, issued a statement online this week, suggesting that Greene and those who agree with her need “to have their head examined.”
He’s not alone. Axios spoke to several other GOP lawmakers, one of whom said Greene’s beliefs on the subject are “loony tunes.” The same member told the outlet that “disgust with her recent comments is widespread among House Republicans.” [Maddowblog]
Both sides are taking her seriously, without realizing that neither is the intended audience. That audience is … the electorate.
An electorate that should terrify the GOP. They and their allies have spent decades denying that anthropogenic climate change can occur, and that capitalism is a prime contributor. If that message fails, they, at a minimum, may lose to regulation an economic system at the core of their beings; and it’s not impossible that angry mobs might toss them into the ocean, or worse.
So what’s going on here?
Greene is simply finding a new way to deny it. Much like talking to the Divine, she’s pointing at a mysterious “them” who are controlling the weather, a hypothesis that, much like the Divine, cannot easily be falsified.
In other words, Greene is fighting for her political survival. Unlike her colleagues, she’s willing to go to any length, and play it as strong as necessary, to save that career.
This could get more intriguing, not to mention silly, before the election.
As the giants strolled by, Francisco de Goya frantically painted them, but he painted so quickly the friction of his brushes caused almost all the paintings to catch fire and burn up.
This is why oil painting is dangerous.
Yes, depending on who you are and, inversely, how little you know about poll accuracy and trustability, polls can be frightening. A writer using the dubious handle (I’ve been in social media since the early ’80s, so’s I gets to say “dubious handle”) gingytheelephantboy has an article out on Daily Kos that, again, is either reassuring or even more terrifying. Important points:
A special election was held to fill George Santos’ seat. The polls showed a toss-up. The Democrat won by 8 points. The last special election of the season was held in New Jersey last month. The seat was safely Blue and turnout was very small. The Democrat took 80 percent as compared to 75 the last time around. Yesterday in Fairbanks, a +14 Trump city, the Democrat won the mayoral election by 15 percent [sic]. Are we seeing a pattern here?
So why do I continue this series? I’m trying, as a non-specialist, to convey how to evaluate a campaign in terms of anticipating winners and losers during a campaign. I dare to say that my qualifications are the qualifications of most of the electorate, except I’m now (sigh) 60+ years old, and having 40 years in social media suggests I’ve had more experience watching and participating in arguments about politics and how the world works than most. I’ve seen a lot of weirdness, from the current absurdly blasphemous surrealism of Christian Nationalism to the assertion that America was about to experience a revolution because, at the time, the homeless in Denver were upset.
But to get back to the point, I try to share my thinking and evaluation methods so readers can get a leg up on not being 60+ years. I report polls, but I do not necessarily buy into them. Pollsters will tell you data collection has become more and more difficult. Progressives claim the youth vote, leaning Democratic, is undercounted. I’ve nearly been incessant in insisting the Dobbs decision is the most important factor in this election, and I do not expect to see that fade until the existential edge of reproductive health is once again dealt with in an adult manner – and not religious zealots screaming and running in circles.
Here’s the money quote from gingytheelephantboy:
Here is what I see. Democrats and pro-choice have been outperforming the polls by 5% or more in election after election for two years. And that is where we are today. By the way this doesn’t bother me a bit. If it motivates our voters to turn out like their lives depend upon it, then it is all good.
So the big question is why is this happening. My answer is that the polls are missing something important and it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see what it is. They are just not polling enough women, particularly young women, a group notorious for not voting. And they are the very people who have been registering in droves. Of course they are not being polled, they don’t fit the old models.
Keep the above points in mind when evaluating campaigns, stay a bit skeptical of even top rank pollsters – and when choosing for whom to vote. You weren’t going to skip for despair, were you?
Looking at one of the polls, WaPo doesn’t call out someone else doing, or sharing, the work, and all of FiveThirtyEight’s ratings of WaPo involved its partnering with someone else. Therefore, in the absence of a partner, they are unrated. Fortunately, they only appear once.
Senate candidate Dave McCormick led hedge fund that bet against some of Pennsylvania’s most iconic companies
The first couple of paragraphs are all that is necessary.
In the years that Pennsylvania Senate candidate Dave McCormick led one of the world’s largest hedge funds, the firm bet millions of dollars against some of the state’s biggest and most iconic companies, financial filings show.
Under McCormick’s leadership, Bridgewater Associates shorted the stocks of nearly 50 companies headquartered in Pennsylvania, including The Hershey Company and US Steel, a CNN review of records from the US Department of Labor found.
I don’t think most voters will care. Shorting is not an option generally known to the non-investing public, but it’s not an exotic or illicit investment strategy, no matter how much some amateur investors hop up and down in outrage. I have never used it, as gains are limited to roughly 100%, while potential for loss is unlimited; it’s a tool of the confident professionals. Who sometimes go broke using it, just like us long investors.
This strikes me as a scare article.
On the other hand, this article on a ham-handed visit by Mr McCormick to Philadelphia is not in the least surprising.
In other, more numerical news, highly respected Quinnipiac University (2.8) gives Senator Casey (R-PA) a 51%-43% lead over McCormick, a thoroughly reasonable lead, with a margin of error of ±2.6 points. Emerson College (2.9) gives the Senator a 48%-46% lead, which is within Emerson College’s ±3 point credibility interval. As with many Emerson College polls, it seems sometimes more rightward-leaning than many pollsters are measuring. TIPP Insights (1.8), working for Republican-aligned American Greatness, gives the Senator a 47%-43% lead with likely voters and a 48%-40% lead with registered voters. The big gap between likely and registered voters seems unlikely, but I’m not sure what it implies.
Maryland voters are poised to enshrine the right to abortion access in the state constitution, with 69% of voters saying they will support it and just 21% opposed, according to a poll released Wednesday.
It’s certainly possible that abortion amendments on the ballot of conservative States may sway many voters to favor not only the amendment, but the liberal minority who put it on the ballot.
37% have a positive impression of Mucarsel-Powell. 23% have a negative view of her. A notable 40% have either never heard of her or are unsure how to rate Mucarsel-Powell.
Much like Democratic challenger Rep Allred (D-TX) in Texas, Mucarsel-Powell making herself known to Florida voters may reap big benefits.
39% have a favorable opinion of Allred. 36% have an unfavorable impression of him, and 25% have either never heard of Allred or are unsure how to rate him.
Allred must reach those 25% who don’t know he exists.
Since last month, Gallego’s support increased two points while Lake’s support held at 43%.
So perhaps momentum is with Gallego. David Weigel has an interesting differential analysis of Mr. Gallego and Vice President Harris in Semafor here.
Mr Osborn’s pollster is Change Research, which at least has a rating, but it’s a deeply unimpressive 1.4. Nor do they do much published work. They are giving Mr Osborn the lead, 46%-43%. Of course.
So how to evaluate this? It’s almost impossible to say, except maybe Don’t evaluate it. I’m going to recognize this as dueling propaganda. Both sides are trying to convince their partisans that the race is still winnable, so come on out and vote. The implied message is entirely honorable.
But if I were Nebraskan, I might be irritable. I dislike manipulation, and that’s the essence of this, to my mind.
Nyah, too tired. Crank broke. Wife needs attention. Cat needs food.
Have a good weekend, folks.
Toxic narcissism is true not only for Mr Trump, but many of his followers as well:
The latest national NBC News poll found Donald Trump trailing Kamala Harris by 21 points among women voters. The good news for Republicans is that the former president is well aware of the gender gap. The bad news for Republicans is that he doesn’t know what to do about it. [Steve Benen, Maddowblog]
A twenty one point gap for the women voters – and that may be an underestimate. And it should be a red-light message to all the conservatives who still consider themselves good people and plan to vote Republican – a lot of people look at Trump and his associates and are repelled.
YouGov Oct. 6-7
49% Harris
45% Trump
1% Stein
0% West
Redfield & Wilton Strategies Oct. 6
48% Harris
46% Trump
1% Oliver
1% Stein
Pew Research Center Sept. 30-Oct. 6
48% Harris
47% Trump
2% Kennedy
1% Oliver
1% Stein
0% West
West is Independent Cornel West, Stein is Jill Stein of the Green Party, Oliver is Chase Oliver of the Libertarians. It doesn’t appear the et al will impact this election much. Data from here.
Proroguing:
Prorogation in the Westminster system of government is the action of proroguing, or interrupting, a parliament, or the discontinuance of meetings for a given period of time, without a dissolution of parliament. The term is also used for the period of such a discontinuance between two legislative sessions of a legislative body. [Wikipedia]
Or maybe suspension? Noted in “Boris Johnson just published his political memoir. It’s unbelievable.” William Booth, WaPo:
Asked on LBC Radio by host Nick Ferrari: “Which was your greater lie? Lying about proroguing Parliament to the queen, or lying to Parliament about the [rule-breaking pandemic] parties?”
[Former Prime Minister Boris] Johnson eventually answered, “Neither. Since neither of them were a lie, there was no lie.”
Given how Mr Trump dribbles out lies at every opportunity, I’ve come up with this:
Mendacity Machine.
“Tell me, do you really want me to vote for the Mendacity Machine? Will you be voting for the Mendacity Machine? Do your parents approve of voting for the Mendacity Machine.”
Playwrights are coached to use the name of a character thrice in order to implant it in the consciousness of the audience, and I’m pleased to note that three was easily achieved in the above passage.
Feel free to use it, folks.
Following along in the wake of Republican governors thanking President Biden for Federal assistance with Hurricane Helene is Rep Chuck Edwards (R-NC) and a praiseworthy press release, from which I extract the following (and mess up the numbering, apologies):
- FEMA is NOT going to run out of money.
- FEMA officials have repeatedly affirmed that the agency has enough money for immediate response and recovery needs over the next few months.
- Secretary Mayorkas’ statement indicating otherwise was an irresponsible attempt to politicize a tragedy for personal gain.
- In the coming months, Western North Carolina is going to need more disaster relief funding than is currently available to assist with recovery efforts.
- I’m confident that supplemental disaster relief funding, which I am already involved in the process of creating, will be considered in the House once we return to session in mid-November.
There’s a lot of other good stuff. No, I do not know the story about any statement by Secretary Mayorkas, and how it’d be for personal gain. Frankly, the Republicans have tried to victimize the Secretary for his entire term, for no honest reason I can discern, and this may simply be another go at it.
But I could be wrong.
I went to bed last night with that feeling of a relentless tragedy about to happen, that everything is changing, as it does when close relatives pass away. Still got it this morning.
Is this what every hurricane season will be like in the future? Savage storms, the like of which have been unseen by humanity until now?
Maybe Milton will turn out to be a dud. I’d go with that.
From Julie Szego:
Hence, a fascinating, irreconcilable dispute, impossibly named Tickle v Giggle.
I wonder if we’re about to see a tidal wave of case names where the litigant names have been carefully chosen to be amusing.
Sounds totally frivolous.
My, the silt has accumulated quickly.
WaPo has a report on an unsurprising, but risky, change in Republican strategy for some House members, a change that can be anticipated to appear in Senate races, and in fact already has …
Some Republicans appear to be softening — even backtracking on — their reproductive rights positions
As Nov. 5 approaches and the struggle for control of the U.S. House reaches a fever pitch, Democrats are doing everything they can to tie their Republican opponents to their antiabortion voting records. Some Republican candidates, meanwhile, seem to be softening their positions. And political analysts say it’s part of a larger trend playing out nationwide, up and down the ballot.
“The politics of abortion and reproductive health can get voters to participate at higher rates,” said David McCuan, a political science professor at Sonoma State University. “Republicans have to moderate their stance if they’re going to be in the battle.”
Senator Cruz (R-TX) is greasing his reelection bid with something similar:
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz has been a loud anti-abortion crusader throughout his political career.
But as reproductive rights loom over the election season as a key issue for voters, Cruz is uncharacteristically quiet.
The Texas Republican, running for a third term in the Senate, is locked in a tight race against U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, D-Dallas, who has made restoring access to abortion and blaming Cruz for the toppling of Roe v. Wade central to his campaign. [The Texas Tribune]
An anti-abortion stance is one of the pillars of the conservative movement – everyone and their pet poodle knows this. Will conservatives accept this change and vote as the Party expects? Will independents, many of which don’t pay much attention to politics, notice the sudden change and label it hypocrisy?
This’ll be a threading of the needle, and could be the trick for winning for the Republicans – or the camel’s terrifying straw.
Yes – and I ignored it, per this post. Senator Klobuchar (D-MN) only up by 8 points? Come on!
Yes, I did, and so did you if you read ahead. Despite the most boring name ever, Research Co has a respectable rating of 2.4 from FiveThirtyEight, so they get some respect right out of the gate – they’re new to me.
However, I was a little dismayed to see that their sample size is limited to 450, and for larger States that is inadequate. Most of the big pollsters have much larger sample sizes, so I’m uncomfortable accepting Research Co. results, even if I cite their margin of error.
But there’s not much to be done for it. I’m just a fly holding on to the end of the plane’s rudder.
Meanwhile, and a blow to CWS Research’s thesis, The Texas Tribune reports multiple organizations are changing their evaluations of the Texas Senate race:
Cook Political Report shifted its rating for the race from “Likely Republican” to “Lean Republican” on Tuesday. Inside Elections shifted its rating from “Likely Republican” to “Lean Republican” last week.
This is important as it indicates momentum is now with Allred, and he has about three weeks to capitalize on it. That, in turn, will force Republicans to send money to Cruz’s operation to finance efforts to retain the seat, and these are resources that they might have to sent to other races, such as, say, Senator Fischer (R-NE)?
“Independent voters in will be crucial in securing a victory for either of the main presidential candidates in Michigan and Wisconsin,” says Mario Canseco, President of Research Co. “More than one-in-five Independents in both Wisconsin (24%) and Michigan (22%) have not made up their minds yet.”
As many pundits note, most folks have a definite opinion of Mr Trump. If they’re not already committed, I think the independents will either look at Mr Trump’s amateur antics, anti-American statements, and sheer flood of mendacity, and decide to go with VP Harris, or they’ll dimly remember the old chestnut that Republicans are better with the economy, forget how badly the economy collapsed when Mr Trump was faced with the challenge of the pandemic, never hear about the failure of the 2017 tax reform, passed by the Republicans, to attain its much ballyhooed objectives while adding to the Federal debt, and vote for Republicans, even though Mr Hovde is a rankly arrogant beginner.
But I think this race is all over except the shouting of electoral cheating! Will Wisconsin House Speaker Robin Vos (R) lead the chant, will he be too embarrassed?
Similarly, Scott Rasmussen, working for Napolitan Institute (FiveThirtyEight lists Rasmussen as working with, or for, RMG Research (2.3), but the publishing is via a Tweet rather than the usual press release with RMG Research’s imprimatur, which makes me wonder if this is just Rasmussen working on his own, and, as such, is listed on FiveThirtyEight, but without an actual rating, reflective of Rasmussen’s reputation as a rank partisan with little regard for honesty of results reporting. However, a close look at the Napolitan Institute press release, a separate link, does reference RMG Research, so we’re back to the confusing Is it 2.3 question) … let me get my focus back … oh, yes, measures a ten point lead for Gallego of 52%-42%. Additionally,
Thirty-eight percent (38%) have a favorable view of Kari Lake while 58% have an unfavorable view. Ruben Gallego is even in favorability/unfavorability at 46%.
So long as Lake’s favorability numbers hold in the above region, not only is Lake’s campaign finished, so’s her political career – and possibly her time in the limelight. I figure most of these characters – MAGAites – are simply frustrated attention-seekers, so oblivion is the worst thing that can happen, at least in their imaginations. As such, expect Lake to engage in worse and worse behavior, trying to keep attention on herself. And it won’t work.
Unknown pollster SoCal Strategies, sponsored by On Point Politics and Republican-aligned Red Eagle Politics, gives Gallego a comfortable thirteen point margin at 51%-39%. SoCal does appear to use entirely online polling, and, despite protestations of anti-fraud strategies, I am a little suspicious of an entirely online approach to data gathering.
In contrast, National Research (2.0) gives Gallego a mere six point lead at 48%-42%. Their sponsors are Democracy Defense Project and Echo Canyon Consulting, the latter known to be Republican-aligned. Did National Research skew their results, or just apply a conservative leaning model? That’s the questions that afflict me when seeing results not in agreement with top pollsters. Even Fabrizio, Lee & Associates/Impact Research (1.7) give Gallego a bigger gap at 51%-44%. I still figure Gallego by 15.
Laurie Roberts of azcentral notes that
After two years of virtual nonstop campaigning, Lake has succeeded in boosting the number of Arizonans who don’t like her by 9 points.
This is unsurprising. The type of arrogant character attracted to the likes of Mr Trump are generally disliked by the vast majority of citizens, even if some will make the excuse that they’re not frenching the candidate, as an Iowan was recently quoted as saying, merely voting for them. It’s worth noting that those citizens are usually wrong about the frenching, since the economic and social chaos will directly impact them.
Bad character should never be trusted with great responsibility – or great power.
If neither a Founding Father nor a Roman nor an ancient Greek said that, they should have.
Now there’s a new poll by unknown, but prolific, pollster ActiVote. I have been unable to ignore the observations that they do seem to lean conservative, and may skew certain poll reports to reinforce a conservative-desired win. Their polls might then be expected to reinforce Rep Banks, right? Right?
Their recent poll has a 56%-44% lead for Banks over McCray, and while 12 points isn’t that different from Emerson College, it is less than Emerson College, and much less than the 20 point gap I fully expected to see from a Republican-leaning pollster like ActiVote.
A Little Later: And now, shockingly, there’s this:
A NEW DEM PICKUP OPPORTUNITY? — National Democrats are eyeing a closer-than-expected governor’s race in deep-red Indiana as a pickup opportunity: The Democratic Governors Association is investing $600,000 into the campaign of former Republican schools chief JENNIFER McCORMICK, who is running against Sen. MIKE BRAUN (R-Ind.), our Adam Wren reports. It comes after their polling showed a “dead heat” race, with McCormick trailing Braun, 44 percent to 41 percent, with Libertarian DONALD RAINWATER pulling 8 percent. [Politico]
Senator Braun’s (R-IN) attempt to move into the Indiana governor’s office is in trouble? There are many questions to ask, but the overarching question is this: do all, or least most, of those questions and answers apply to Rep Banks? Are Senator Braun and Rep Banks related in the minds of Indiana voters?
Well, I have the answer to one question: Are they both ideological hard-liners? On the right, the On The Issues diagrammatic summary of Senator Braun is clearly indicating the Senator is a hard-liner. If you follow this link, you’ll find the On The Issues diagrammatic summary for Republican nominee Rep Banks, but I can save you the trouble: the diagrams are the same, or near enough. They are so similar that I actually double-checked the Banks diagram at On The Issues.
Other questions certainly involve Dobbs; attitudes towards women in general; the salutary lesson of Governor Brownback’s (R-KS) tenure in Kansas with regard to the economic and educational deficiencies that developed from his application of Republican tenets to the State; general Republican mendacity; Trumpism in Indiana; and etc. Any and all may apply, may explain Braun’s problems – and may predict future problems (as in, tomorrow) for Rep Banks in his attempt to be promoted to the Senate.
May, may, may.
There’s nothing definitive here, just a divergence from my expectations when it comes to Indiana, and the surprise of a close race for governor. Nothing may come of it: Banks may win in a walk. But I’ll keep hoping for another poll by a highly rated pollster.
In separate news, M. L. Elrick of the Detroit Free Press has raised a question: Does Mike Rogers actually live in Michigan? I don’t think anything will come of this, at least not legally. But I’ve been wrong many times before, and not just as a software engineer. And, at the very least, some fence sitters will be offended and vote against him. Maybe. Honestly, I didn’t really consider Rogers, who has lived most of his life in Michigan, before moving down to Florida and then either returning, or trying to return, a carpet-bagger.
OK, so Research Co (2.4) is giving Senator Casey (D-PA) a 51%-48% lead over challenger David McCormick (R-PA?), which is within the margin of error of ±4.6 points for this poll. Prolific unknowable right-leaning pollster ActiVote gives the Senator a 53%-47% lead, or six points, which is greater than their margin of error of ±4.9 points. Another unknown pollster, The Bullfinch Group, is giving Senator Casey a 52%-42% lead, or ten points with a margin of error of ±3.46. Too bad they have no history.
Notably, all of these polls show Casey over the magical 50% mark, although not when the margin of error is figured in.
Curtis Bashaw, the Republican nominee for New Jersey’s U.S. Senate seat, appeared to have a temporary “medical episode” during his debate against Democratic U.S. Rep. Andy Kim on Oct. 6.
While answering a question, the 62-year-old gay hotelier started slurring his words and stopped speaking entirely mid-sentence. Kim asked if he was all right. “Yeah,” Bashaw replied. [MetroWeekly]
Mr Bashaw resumed the debate a few minutes later, blaming a lack of nutrition. I do hope he’s fine, as I view him as a possible leader of the successor to the current Republican Party.
Oooops, no time. Must mean my clock stopped, destroying time and the whole concept of a finish line. Pity that.
If I’m to believe Ryan Hall, Hurricane Milton, now a Category 5 hurricane forecast to impact the Tampa Bay, FL area on Wednesday, went from a disorganized mess in the Gulf of Mexico to a tightly organized, laser-like monster of a storm in just a couple of days, not forecast until then, when most hurricanes can be foreseen a couple of weeks out.
This is following Hurricane Helene, which devastated the Carolinas and provoked Erick Erickson into a barking madness. That was just last week.
This following days, months, and years of heat records for the entire world, during which Australia burned and heat waves affected most of the planet, and polar ice noticeably thinned and decreased.
Can this be considered convincing evidence that climate change is real, is human-originated, will not be resolved by any Divinity, and the cost of doing so just keeps going up the more we screw around arguing the matter?
Or is this how humanity exits stage left, screaming, pointing fingers, and inelegantly proclaiming innocence, as if there’ll be something to receive such self-important proclamations?
As a very long-time user of social media, it’s a necessity, in my opinion, to stop and think about any hidden agendas those writers – let’s not call them content-generators, eh? – you’re reading, that you don’t know on a personal level, may hold. Why? Let Senator Kelly (D-AZ), retired American astronaut, and retired American Navy Captain, tell you:
Senate Intelligence Committee member Mark Kelly warns of a “huge” misinformation campaign by foreign actors. After hearing from the FBI, DNI, and NSA, Kelly estimates that 20%-30% of the political content and comments on social media are generated by Russia, Iran, and China. pic.twitter.com/98Vwb44TWI
— Keith Boykin (@keithboykin) October 6, 2024
Senate Intelligence Committee member Mark Kelly warns of a “huge” misinformation campaign by foreign actors. After hearing from the FBI, DNI, and NSA, Kelly estimates that 20%-30% of the political content and comments on social media are generated by Russia, Iran, and China.
20-30% of political comment and contents is generated by our international adversaries? People who are not making honest arguments, providing factual information, discussing in proper American spirit – instead, poisoning the spirit of old-fashioned American discussion.
My readers, do you pause to consider this possibility before stepping into a discussion?
The Bob’s Burgers Movie (2022) is, essentially, and perhaps inevitably, a longer version of a Bob’s Burgers episode, but with better art and, if you pay attention to the characters, deeper character development.
And that’s about all I have to say, really. If you like the TV series, you’ll enjoy the movie, and if you don’t like nor watch the series, then the movie will make some sense, but quite a few references won’t.
And that’s OK. Enjoy.
But not by me.
We’ve taken to watching Ryan Hall, via YouTube, to get a view on the national weather scene, which can be important for anyone east of the Rockies.
Today, prior to his discussion of Milton, a Tropical Storm Cat 1 Hurricane that came together far more quickly than anyone predicted and is menacing Tampa, maybe, Hall did a nice PSA on the dangers of the Internet, and I rather liked it.
If you’ve not heard of Hall, give him a look.