Originally posted by chancellor
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If DMT didn't exist we would have to invent it. There has to be a weirdest thing. Once we have the concept weird, there has to be a weirdest thing. And DMT is simply it.
- Terence McKenna
Bullshit is everywhere. - George Carlin (& Jon Stewart)
How old would you be if you didn't know how old you are? - Satchel Paige
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Originally posted by umjewman View PostAdmittedly, that is voting age population, rather than voting eligible, so good catch. Of course, whether it's 92 or 112 million who sat out, if you're starting from 220 million eligible voters with your calculations (as OneJ did), that is in error since he does not account for the substantial number of people that simply will not vote. Even with increased enthusiasm, how many people are going to vote in this election? 150M? Of those 12M additional votes, Trump is going to take them on a 2/3-1/3 basis? And this is also granting the premise that he has not lost a single voter from 2016 or that each voter he has lost has been cancelled out by a voter who voted for someone else. I just don't see it. But, I have no quarrel with thee. You actually make sense when you're posting, rather than posting cryptic, mysterious gibberish.
The enthusiasm gap is exemplified in the 2018 election. This is simply a matter of Republicans doing the same thing Democrats have shown is possible.
Originally posted by Kevin Seitzer View PostTrump won over Evan McMullin? (The answer is no, no he did not.)
JAd Astra per Aspera
Oh. In that case, never mind. - Wonderboy
GITH fails logic 101. - bryanbutler
Bah...OJH caught me. - Pogues
I don't know if you guys are being willfully ignorant, but... - Judge Jude
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Originally posted by onejayhawk View PostCertainly the base voted in 2016, though how fully is a separate question. However a lot of Republicans were not yet in the base. Reference, yet again, Gary Johnson and Evan McMullin. Trump won them over, eg chancellor.
Also, I think you are mischaracterizing Chancellor, your libertarian example. I believe he has never been a reluctant Trump supporter that has slowly been won over. He was a supporter from day 1, or at least from the moment Trump was the nominee vs HRC, if my memory serves me correctly. Certainly, he voted for Trump in 2016, so if he is your reference point for 2016 libertarians that voted for Johnson or McMullin and now will vote for Trump, you are mistaken there. If you are looking for a libertarian that did not vote Trump in 2016, that would be nots, but I doubt you can count him in your group of won over libtertarians either.
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Originally posted by onejayhawk View Post
I did not say win over (though Trump did defeat McMullin). I said reclaim McMullin's voters. Likewise most of the Libertarian vote.
J
But taking you at your intended meaning, again, where is the evidence that there is a significant block of libertarian voters that did not vote for Trump in 2016 that will vote for him in 2020? None of the names you have used so far--Johnson, McMullin's, or Chance, fit that bill, and I can find no evidence for your claim, as per usual. If you do have evidence, though, I am open to learning it. That would add actual value to the conversation and my knowledge of the subject, which I always appreciate, even when the knowledge is not what I want it to be.Last edited by Sour Masher; 09-21-2020, 09:17 PM.
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostSee above.
By your own quote you have it wrong, not that it matters. The point is that McMullin will not be getting the votes and Trump will. It's an improvement of about 700K votes. That's not nothing, but it isn't even a quarter of the difference between Johnson 2012 and Johnson 2016. In all it's about 4 million wayward votes that are likely to come back to the Republican incumbent.
JAd Astra per Aspera
Oh. In that case, never mind. - Wonderboy
GITH fails logic 101. - bryanbutler
Bah...OJH caught me. - Pogues
I don't know if you guys are being willfully ignorant, but... - Judge Jude
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Originally posted by onejayhawk View PostWhy are you picking nits?
By your own quote you have it wrong, not that it matters. The point is that McMullin will not be getting the votes and Trump will. It's an improvement of about 700K votes. That's not nothing, but it isn't even a quarter of the difference between Johnson 2012 and Johnson 2016. In all it's about 4 million wayward votes that are likely to come back to the Republican incumbent.
J
Here now, finally, with this post, your initial meaning is clear, and a potentially good point is found underneath the fog. Your claim seems to be that since those candidates will not run in 2020, their votes will all go to Trump. I understand the assumption--after all, those that voted for those two would naturally throw in with the Republican, given no other option. However, that is just an assumption, not a supported claim in this case, and there is evidence that suggests that while most of those voters would vote Republican, if no right of center 3rd party candidate is running, they will not do so when that candidate is Donald Trump (it also dismisses the possibility that JoJo will pull a good amount of voters for the Libertarian ticket). Do you have any evidence, beyond your assumption, that supports those voters will all vote for Trump in 2020?Last edited by Sour Masher; 09-21-2020, 10:05 PM.
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And on the same subject, you assume every single vote from McMullin and Johnson from 2016 will go to Trump, but say nothing of the 1.5 million votes Jill Stein got in 2016. Where will they go? Surely not Trump, or do you contend he will get her voters too? Or is it Harry Hawkins who well get them? Well, then, what about Jo Jorgensen, then, soaking up some of those libertarian votes? Jorgenson is on the ballot in all 50 states, I believe, which is more than Hawkins.
Hell, in my area, I've seen a few Jo2020 bumper stickers, and I gotta say, it looks too much like Biden's stickers. Whoever designed them should have thought of that. I haven't seen a Hawkins supporter yet.
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My biggest concerns right now are Florida and Michigan. Florida is going to Trump because Biden isn't appealing enough to Latinos. He's well behind HRC with Latinos across the board, and Florida is where it will hurt the most. The one area Bernie Sanders destroyed Biden was with Latinos. The Latino outreach strategy laid out by Chuck Rocha was awesome. Biden's teams arrogance in ignoring Sanders' best assets is a concern. Latinos value immigration as their 4th-7th biggest issue, according to various polls, yet Biden continues to talk about Latinos almost entirely from the immigration aspect. It's a losing strategy.
Michigan is insane to me. How the hell does Biden have zero field offices in Michigan? I know Biden visited recently, but the lack of a campaign presence seems like a bad sign. Polling in Michigan has dipped, which caused Michael Moore to ring the alarm bells.
I'm not saying Trump will definitely win, but those 2 states are my biggest concern right now. Also, knowing so many states Supreme courts are filled with Republicans, and the SC is conservative majority, several states could be stolen through cherry picking the votes. Terrifying.Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."
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CBC News put up a new interactive election game. Pick the winner in each battleground state to find the winner. I played 3 likely scenarios, and Trump won 2 of 3.
Looking at the math is terrifying. I consider some states locks for Trump: North Carolina, Ohio, Iowa, Georgia, and Texas. Under this scenario, Trump only needs to win Florida, and any one other state from Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona. That seems quite possible to me. If Biden needs Florida it will be 2000 re-run, Brooks Brothers riots 2.0 (this time with guns!) and the Dems will fold again.
Edit: here's the link if you want to play out a couple scenarios.
https://newsinteractives.cbc.ca/elec...battlegrounds/Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."
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Originally posted by Teenwolf View PostLooking at the math is terrifying. I consider some states locks for Trump: North Carolina, Ohio, Iowa, Georgia, and Texas. Under this scenario, Trump only needs to win Florida, and any one other state from Pennsylvania, Michigan, Arizona. That seems quite possible to me. If Biden needs Florida it will be 2000 re-run, Brooks Brothers riots 2.0 (this time with guns!) and the Dems will fold again.I'm just here for the baseball.
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Originally posted by Sour Masher View PostI don't have it wrong, and I am picking nits, because after all this time, I still am not certain if you are purposefully abstruse, or accidently so.
Yeah, and if I were the Trump campaign, I'd find about $5-6 mil and dump it into ads for Hawkins in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania.I'm just here for the baseball.
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Originally posted by chancellor View PostSince we're picking nits, the correct term is "obtuse".
Yeah, and if I were the Trump campaign, I'd find about $5-6 mil and dump it into ads for Hawkins in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Your second point is some interesting "outside the box" strategy. Are you being tongue-in-cheek? Because I actually think it would not be a bad idea, but has it ever been done before? I think the embarrassment factor would be high if Biden's campaign was caught funding a 3rd party candidate's ads.
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Here's the article from Time magazine from a week ago regarding Biden's zero field offices in Michigan, in case folks missed it.
https://time.com/5889093/joe-biden-michigan-campaign/
Four years ago, Don Sabbe made what he calls a “devastating” mistake. Determined only to cast a vote for a candidate he believed in, he left the top of his ballot blank in the 2016 presidential election. This year, the 83-year old former Chrysler employee says he’ll definitely vote for Joe Biden, but he’s getting concerned about Biden’s campaign here in Michigan.
“I can’t even find a sign,” Sabbe says outside a Kroger’s in Sterling Heights, where surrounding cars fly massive Donald Trump flags that say “No More Bullsh-t” and fellow shoppers wear Trump T-shirts for their weekend grocery runs. “I’m looking for one of those storefronts. I’m looking for a campaign office for Biden. And I’m not finding one.”
The reason Sabbe can’t find a dedicated Biden campaign field office is because there aren’t any around here. Not in Macomb County, the swing region where Sabbe lives. It’s not even clear Biden has opened any new dedicated field offices in the state; because of the pandemic, they’ve moved their field organizing effort online. The Biden campaign in Michigan refused to confirm the location of any physical field offices despite repeated requests; they say they have “supply centers” for handing out signs, but would not confirm those locations. The campaign also declined to say how many of their Michigan staff were physically located here. Biden’s field operation in this all-important state is being run through the Michigan Democratic Party’s One Campaign, which is also not doing physical canvassing or events at the moment. When I ask Biden campaign staffers and Democratic Party officials how many people they have on the ground in Michigan, one reply stuck out: “What do you mean by ‘on the ground?'"
Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."
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Originally posted by chancellor View PostHmmm...I'm not considering NC or Iowa locks. Your point about Michigan in the earlier post is stunning - while Biden has shown in Michigan and Wisconsin, his lack of field offices in Michigan is a huge error.Larry David was once being heckled, long before any success. Heckler says "I'm taking my dog over to fuck your mother, weekly." Larry responds "I hate to tell you this, but your dog isn't liking it."
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Not defending Biden here, but is the criticism of Biden's lack of ground game in Michigan really a criticism of his larger pandemic campaigning strategy to shift away from boots on the ground, knocking on doors campaigning? My understanding is that he has moved away from that across everywhere.
And it would frighten me, but I recall how very, very little he actually did in South Carolina. At the time, I thought that would be his Alamo. But it ended up being his Normandy. So, I just don't know. Logically, obviously, it does not make sense to ignore Michigan. It is scary if he is doing so, unless he knows something we do not, or his campaign does, rather.
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