Posted on 03/24/2014 5:30:59 AM PDT by SJackson
Sometimes I wonder why pollsters ask the American people about anything. Whats the point? I mean, would Gallup ask someone from Uzbekistan if he thinks Mickey Mantle was a better centerfielder than Willie Mays? Would the NBC/Wall Street Journal polling outfit ask the average man on the street in Kabul if he prefers Canali or Hugo Boss? So why would a pollster ask Americans about almost anything not having to do with Dancing with the Stars?
If you think Im channeling H.L. Mencken, who believed youll never go broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people, give yourself a gold star.
Still, we poll Americans on just about everything even though a lot of folks dont know much about anything.
Take several recent Rasmussen polls. In one, only 29 percent of likely voters said incumbent members of the House and Senate should be re-elected. That sounds smart, given that we now have more respect for bank robbers than politicians. Except come November, just about everybody in Congress will be re-elected by these same people who told Rasmussen that that they wanted to kick the bums out.
This is from Politico after the 2012 elections: Despite rock-bottom congressional approval ratings, voters reelected their incumbents at near-banana-republic levels in 2012. And what were those near banana republic levels? Try 90 percent. Thats right, 9 out of 10 members of the House and Senate who sought re-election were re-elected.
So the Rasmussen poll tells us nothing because the people Rasmussen polled are either duplicitous or dont know what the word incumbent means.
Then there was the question about taxes. A whopping 69 percent of the Americans polled said the middle class pays a larger percentage in taxes than do the rich.
Here are the facts: The top one percent pays about 37 percent of all federal income taxes and the top five percent pays almost 60 percent.
So whats the point, I ask again, in polling people who dont know what theyre talking about? Are we supposed to learn something from their lack of knowledge?
And then theres this: despite the fact that most Americans give the president low grades on his handling of the economy; despite the fact that most Americans say they dont like ObamaCare; despite the fact that according to Rasmussen only 29 percent of likely voters think America is heading in the right direction despite all of that, about half (49 percent) still approve of the job Mr. Obama is doing, according to Rasmussen. Huh?
Rush Limbaugh has a name for Americans who dont know whats going on. He calls them low information voters. Why in the world would a pollster ask these chuckleheads their opinions, for example, about how the president is handing the crisis in Crimea a place many of them undoubtedly never heard of or probably think has something to do with crime.
I have long thought that dolts should not be allowed to vote. But thats a discussion for another time. For now, lets simply agree that Rasmussen, Gallup, Quinnipiac and all the others who ask low information Americans what they think about complex issues are wasting our time.
But I dont want to leave any of you with the wrong impression. There most certainly are plenty of smart Americans out there whose opinions matter. And I would never suggest that most Americans are stupid. That would be rude. So Ill leave the last word to some guy named Albert Einstein, who once said: Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and Im not sure about the universe.
I for one have never heard of this Einstein fellow, who also said that the difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
I dont get it which makes me a perfect candidate to answer any questions Mr. Gallup or Mr. Rasmussen might have for me.
The difference between genius and stupidity?
Genius has limits.
CC
Actually a pretty stupid column.
Most congresscritters are in ideologically safe seats, so the Democrat or Republican is likely to get reelected simply for being a Democrat or a Republican. At the primary level, many within those parties who are located in a safe jurisdiction would likely prefer a candidate somewhat more tailored to their perspective, but getting a good, position-tailored opponent to run in a primary against a sitting congresscritter in a ‘safe’ seat is not an easy thing to do.
As to Americans’ opinions on Crimea, we don’t poll them in order to find the wisest course of action, but to see how it might play out in a political context, particularly for the upcoming election.
Which is why the tea Party should be focused on primary challenges to RINOs.
I have always believed that a very results of a “POLL” can be pre-determined by the proper selection of the people asked the question of the day.
For example—Poll the residents of the inner city as to their opinion of the “Fairness” of the tax burden on the “rich” and 99.7% of the respondents will say the “rich” do NOT pay their “fair share”.
The headline—”Poll finds 99.7% find “rich” highly favored by tax loopholes and breaks.”
As the very same question in an upper class neighborhood and guess what THAT poll would report.
It is not rocket science.
Stupid can’t be fixed and we are so screwed!
Freegards
LEX
Does the author seriously “not get” the Einstein quote?
YOU are calling Goldberg stupid? Now there’s a prime example!
I agree. I’d like to go further and see the tea party organized to the national level so as to exert more pressure on the GOPe and, failing that, emerge as an outright replacement to the duplicitous, Establishment Republican Party.
Also, some RINOs in blue and purple areas need support from a simple majority-vote perspective. I don’t have a problem with being pragmatic in regions where pragmatic is the best we can hope for.
I called his column stupid.
And I don’t shrink before your view of his massive brain.
“Actually a pretty stupid column.’
Actually it is not. Perhaps you want to reread it.
Great article! Thanks for posting!
There is a big difference between approving of YOUR congress critter, and approving of everyone else’s.
Simply brilliant.
Apparently some of us can get more out of a single read than others can pick up at all.
Aye, there's the rub.
There is a big difference between approving of YOUR congress critter, and approving of everyone elses.
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Old ‘Quote’ of mine:
“We are in agreement that ALL Politicians, Teachers, Lawyers are crooked and only have their OWN interests at heart.
EXCEPT ‘MINE’.”
So, in essence anyone I MAY vote for is great but anyone YOU vote for is worthless, unless, of course, YOU agree with ME.
Then ‘WE’ wonder why the same slugs get back into office every election.
I propose that if ‘THEY’ don’t give us what ‘WE’ want, remove all doubt and vote for the ‘other’ side with the ONLY exception being, say a Scott Brown is hands down better than Pocobeth Warren, if for nothing else getting the seat in ‘our’ column.
Sitting home and NOT voting for Brown just makes it harder in the long run.
Is a ‘somewhat’ R Liberal in a VERY LIBERAL D State worse than say a Markham, Warren, Reid, Biden, Franken etal?
Get the seat THEN ‘fine tune’ it.
But we definitely have to do something about the ‘establishment’ and their choice in Presidential candidates.
“WE” get stuck with McCain and Romney - both of whom demonized their opposition in the Primaries, McCain going on to ‘attack’ his VP candidate because she was more ‘popular’ than he and both McCain and Romney laid down for the Presidential election - for all practical purposes.
The difference is that you can't fix stupid.
An ignorant person can overcome their ignorance of a topic by verifying facts presented to them. A person who chooses to ignore facts that would relieve their ignorance graduates from ignorant to stupid, hence the expression you cant fix stupid.
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