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Maybe Big Data Should Play Smaller Role in Our Politics
Townhall.com ^ | November 7, 2014 | Jonah Goldberg

Posted on 11/07/2014 6:12:14 AM PST by Kaslin

"To everyone who voted," President Obama said in his press conference on Wednesday, "I hear you. To the two-thirds of voters who chose not to participate yesterday, I hear you, too."

Let me begin with a bit of a rant.

In a sense, this is the last piece of the puzzle to click into place for the president's Nixonian transformation.

Spy on reporters? Check. Bomb a country (or two) without authorization from Congress? Check. Issue dubious claims of executive privilege to conceal embarrassments or prevent scandals? Check. Withdraw from -- and lose -- an unpopular war he didn't start? Check. Corrupt IRS? Check. Imperial presidency? Check.

One of the last things on the list was to insist that the silent majority of Americans is really on his side. Of course, Nixon's "silent majority" actually voted. Obama's, not so much. Nixon's silent majority was also actually on his side. Obama's silent majority isn't, at least according to polls. If the majority of Americans agreed with him, a majority of Americans wouldn't disapprove of him.

OK, rant over.

Still, in a way, Obama is right, though not in the way he intends. He can hear from non-voters.

Thanks to the Big Data revolution, we no longer analyze public attitudes, we digitize them. Big corporations don't merely know what consumers want, they know what Bud Gretnick at 123 Sycamore Road, Everywhere USA, wants.

The New York Times famously reported on one instance where a father of a teenage girl was furious that Target was mailing his daughter coupons for baby furniture and maternity clothes.

"My daughter got this in the mail!" the outraged father yelled at a Minnesota store manager. "She's still in high school, and you're sending her coupons for baby clothes and cribs? Are you trying to encourage her to get pregnant?"

It turns out the store knew she was pregnant before the dad did.

Meanwhile, we've been debating for several years how much data-mining the government should be allowed to do in the name of national security. It's a serious debate with solid arguments on both sides. Should the government monitor which websites we go to? Should it keep tabs on who we are emailing? Etc.

Reasonable people can disagree about the pros and cons of all this stuff. What I find remarkable, however, is that we don't seem to care that politicians are in on this game, too.

In the run-up to the midterms, the Democrats sent out letters to presumed Democratic voters in an effort to shame them into voting. "Who you vote for is your secret," read a letter sent out by the New York State Democratic Committee. "But whether or not you vote is public record."

"We will be reviewing voting records ... to determine whether you joined your neighbors who voted in 2014." The letter ends with a creepy, if not outright threatening, warning: "If you do not vote this year, we will be interested to hear why not."

Am I the only one thinks it's bizarre that we spend so much time fretting over how much government agencies can know about us, but we don't seem to care a bit about how much the politicians who run those agencies know about us?

Big Data is in its infancy, but focus groups, polling and other kinds of market research have been staple tools of political consultants for decades. Pop quiz: Have these techniques yielded better, more responsive or more representative politicians and public policies?

Maybe we're doing it wrong? The dirty secret behind gridlock is that all of these seemingly constipated politicians are doing exactly what the market research tells them their customers -- i.e., the voters -- want them to do.

What if politicians didn't have access to focus groups and ZIP code analysis? What if we had no exit polls telling us what the chief concern of married Asian-American males in Portland is?

What if politicians were expected to make decisions based on what they think is right, informed by their principles, their analysis of the issues and from actually talking to constituents -- and not from an analysis of what a dozen people say in a dimly lit room in a shopping mall with men in suits taking notes behind a two-way mirror?

The Founding Fathers didn't take a poll. Nor did Abraham Lincoln. Modern -- though still rudimentary -- polling began in the 1930s. Have our politics really gotten better as a result of ever more sophisticated poll-assisted pandering?

People say the only poll that matters in on Election Day, but it's not true anymore. Maybe it should be again.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 0bama; congress; election2014; gop; senate

1 posted on 11/07/2014 6:12:14 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
"We will be reviewing voting records ... to determine whether you joined your neighbors who voted in 2014." The letter ends with a creepy, if not outright threatening, warning: "If you do not vote this year, we will be interested to hear why not."

Interesting. I wonder if they will use dogs to hunt these voters down.

It seems to me I heard some left-wing talking head, excuse me, talking forehead, named Paul Begala say that they use dogs to hunt blacks down in The South.

Turns out he was talking about the DemocRAT Party.

2 posted on 11/07/2014 6:19:19 AM PST by Texas Eagle
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To: Kaslin

I remember, about 30 years ago, digging thru some of the more obscure books in the library: found a detailed record of elections, broken down to individual voting precinct. While it didn’t say exactly who voted how, I realized that (at least for some precincts) there was enough information there to have a good guess at who voted how (and if at all). It was intriguing and distressing. Fast-forward to the day where everyone has a supercomputer in their pocket, and no surprise all this is being “mined”: the info was there, only now we have the horsepower to process it.

My prime concern is whether the Right realizes that “red/blue” divisions are consistent & pronounced at the edge of urbanized areas, that very little will meaningfully sway those within or without those areas, but precincts on or very close to that edge CAN be swayed with little difficulty if only targeted with care. Those who mine that data properly will win well.


3 posted on 11/07/2014 6:28:24 AM PST by ctdonath2 (You know what, just do it.)
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To: Kaslin

It almost makes me want to forgo voting, just to see them come out to my house. Please, pretty please.


4 posted on 11/07/2014 6:46:10 AM PST by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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To: wbarmy

Conservatives in Dem Strongholds should take advantage of the free rides to the polls and such so as to tax their Push/Pull/Drag resources. “I’ve seen the light and want to vote for Eliz. Warren. My car battery died...can you help me get to the polls?”


5 posted on 11/07/2014 7:17:27 AM PST by Mygirlsmom (Congrats to Gov. Walker on his Three-peat! Love my Gov!!!)
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To: Mygirlsmom

Maybe we can even ask for walking around money. Just to help us decide who to vote for.


6 posted on 11/07/2014 9:10:29 AM PST by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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