Posted on 12/10/2003 9:56:19 AM PST by Ragtime Cowgirl
John Lott, Jr. with a helpful recap of the Dem-press fibs.
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A little of what Florida Freepers learned in 2000:
8 Clintons and other left-wing liars [what I KNOW about election 2000]
And cost Bush one to three MILLION votes in the rest of the country.
Someone suggested that Gore's first reaction to the U.S. Supreme Court decision in December 2000 should have been to file civil charges against David Boies for providing incompetent legal counsel, and then seek to have his license to practice law rescinded. The Gore case was effectively a lost cause once they decided to order recounts with different counting standards only in certain counties -- this was such a blatant violation of U.S. election law that the U.S. Supreme Court had no choice but to determine that it was not a valid recount process.
Consider...
Floridians will be treated to endless stories in the press about the "stolen" 2000 election. Implicit in this argument are two things: Floridians are too stupid to fill out a ballot correctly and/or they're a bunch of racists who deny Blacks their constitutional right to cast a ballot. How do they think that will play with Floridians? Of course the Dems will think they're telling the people that they were disenfranchised but the message they will get is that the state and its citizens are being held up to ridicule before the entire country. For months on end. Not a wise idea, IMHO. Couple that with the presence of a popular governor and some swing in the Jewish vote which appears inevitable and the Bush margin of victory in Florida could be quite high. Meanwhile, the rest of the nation sees the spectacle of the Dems fighting the election over a non-existant issue from the last one instead of looking forward. Bad move (well, from my perspective a great one if it helps Bush get reelected).
Dems just think they're so much smarter than everyone else that they are blind to the fact that many folks strongly resent "big city outsiders" coming in and telling them how to think, especially when the implied message is that the people don't know how to think for themselves.
McAwful has made it clear the election will be fought over Florida. Given his track record, perhaps we should encourage him, no?
..African-American Republicans who voted were 54 to 66 times more likely than the average African American to cast a non-voted ballot (either by not marking that race or voting for too many candidates). [WL-law note: This could be accomplished by destroying their ballot and substituting it with a non-voted ballot (case A) or punching an additional chad out, disqualifying via multiple votes (case B)] To put it another way: For every two additional black Republicans in the average precinct, there was one additional non-voted ballot. By comparison, it took an additional 125 African Americans (of any party affiliation) in the average precinct to produce the same result.[WL-law note: Meaning one in every three African-American votes were tampered with -- and I suspect there are deeper patterns, i.e., concentration within districts, that point even more conclusively to fraud]
Some readers may be surprised that black Republicans even exist in Florida, but, in fact, there are 22,270 such registered voters or about one for every 20 registered black Democrats. This is a large number when you consider that the election in the state was decided by fewer than 1,000 votes. Since these Republicans were more than 50 times more likely to suffer non-voted ballots than other African Americans, the reasonable conclusion is that George W. Bush was penalized more by the losses of African-American votes than Al Gore.
Democrats have also claimed that low-income voters suffered non-voted ballots disproportionately. Yet, the data decisively reject this conclusion. For example, the poorest voters, those in households making less than $15,000 a year, had non-voted ballots at less than one-fifteenth the rate of voters in families making over $500,000. [Similarly, were these non-voters concentrated in certain districts? I think John Lott may know but is being discreet in his accusations...]
It is difficult to believe that wealthy people were more confused by the ballot than poor people.[WL-law note: Not likely] Perhaps the rich or black Republicans simply did not like the choices for president and so did not vote on that part of the ballot. .[WL-law note: Not likely]Perhaps there was tampering, .[WL-law note: BINGO !!] but it is difficult to see how it could have been carried out and covered up. We may never know, but, clearly, the figures show that income and race were only one-third as important in explaining non-voted ballots as the methods and machines used in voting.
I have always thought that massive fraud was carried out on election day. I think it was well-planned, on a national scale, by Donna Brazile and others. Remember that all national polls conducted days before the election had Bush comfortably in front. Remember that Gore went on a 24-hour marathon campaigning swing, in my view to create "plausible cover" for the vote swing to follow.
Don't forget the 400 people being bused from New Jersey to Florida to vote by the Dimocrats.
Don't forget the Dimocrat woman that registered her dog to vote.
Don't forget the Florida Dimocrat Politician caught with voting machines in his car.
Don't forget the man that was working in one of the recounts that was observed eating chads from the ballots.
Huh? I must have missed that part.
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