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Hoover, Fonda References Baffling Voters
NewsMax ^
| 3/19/04
| Limbacher
Posted on 03/19/2004 11:08:21 AM PST by Tumbleweed_Connection
Mention the name Hoover to most Americans and they think you are talking about either a vacuum cleaner, the late F.B.I. chief or a big dam. When Democrats dredge up memories of President Herbert Hoover, the great depression, and the 1929 stock market crash, barely seven percent responding to a National Annenberg Election Survey knew what they were talking about.
And when Republicans try to score points with patriotic voters by linking Senator John Kerry with his fellow anti-Vietnam war comrade Jane Fonda, hardly any among those polled had any idea of what they were talking about.
To 20 percent of them, Jane Fonda is just an actress, another 9 percent tie her to exercise videos, and 2 percent link her to either father Henry Fonda or ex-husband Ted Turner, the Chicago Tribune reported, adding that another 11 percent give other answers.
When survey respondents were asked, "Just your best guess, what was Herbert Hoover known for?" fewer than 7 percent tied Hoover to the Great Depression, the 1929 stock market crash, or job losses - the parallel with President Bush that John Kerry keeps attempting to draw.
Thirty-seven percent cited Hoover as a former president, twelve percent confused him with the late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and another 4 percent connected Hoover to the dam on the Colorado River that bears his name.
Three percent identified Hoover with the popular vacuum cleaner.
Twenty-nine percent of those surveyed had no answer at all when asked about Hoover, while 17 percent had no answer when asked about Fonda.
According to the Tribune, the poll surveyed 634 people by telephone between March 1 and March 15.
TOPICS: Front Page News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: fonda; hanoijane; hoover
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To: rogueleader
Who was President during the Civil War?Which side?
To: rogueleader
The rest are easy, but I always have a hard time remembering what year it is.
22
posted on
03/19/2004 12:07:59 PM PST
by
conejo99
To: MrB
Actually ther numbers are more like this:
10% Hard core righties
10% Righties who wish there were something better than the GOP
10% Hard core lefties
10% Democats-because-their-daddy-was-a-democRat
12% Idiots too dimwitted to follow politics but vote anyway
48% Apathetics who rarely or never vote
23
posted on
03/19/2004 12:19:07 PM PST
by
Blood of Tyrants
(Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn?t be, in its eyes, a slave.)
To: Servant of the 9
One of our found fathers greates fears was that the uninformed would vote.
24
posted on
03/19/2004 12:20:32 PM PST
by
Blood of Tyrants
(Even if the government took all your earnings, you wouldn?t be, in its eyes, a slave.)
To: Blood of Tyrants
You're right about the population as a whole.
But for those that do vote, I'm probably pretty close.
25
posted on
03/19/2004 12:20:48 PM PST
by
MrB
To: Servant of the 9
That can be fixed - move St. Patrick's Day to the first Monday after the first Sunday in November.
26
posted on
03/19/2004 12:21:55 PM PST
by
mabelkitty
(A tuning, a Vote in the topic package to the starting US presidency election fight)
To: rogueleader
I have one question for voters:
Can the federal government do anything that the Constitution doesn't forbid,
or can it do nothing except what the Constitution specifically allows?
Get it wrong, can't vote. That would get rid of 90% of the Democrat voters.
27
posted on
03/19/2004 12:22:42 PM PST
by
MrB
To: Tumbleweed_Connection
And when Republicans try to score points with patriotic voters by linking Senator John Kerry with his fellow anti-Vietnam war comrade Jane Fonda, hardly any among those polled had any idea of what they were talking about.What a shame. It's worth remembering:
28
posted on
03/19/2004 12:24:48 PM PST
by
Mike Bates
(Artist Formerly Known as mikeb704.)
To: rogueleader
Does Congress have the legal power to remove the freedom of speech? Yes.
That's the correct answer altough I suspect you believe the answer is "No". Even though our revered Constitution says "Congress shall make NO law ... abridging the freedom of speech or of the press ..."
For reference see SCOTUS ruling on McStain's Campaign Finance Reform Act. I am depressed. What part of "no law" do they not understand? :-(
29
posted on
03/19/2004 12:52:12 PM PST
by
Tunehead54
(Support Our Troops!)
To: Mike Bates
That's why when I got my bumper stickers printed they say:
I have some left. if anybody wants to buy them at my cost FReepmail me your address.
In God We Trust
..Semper Fi!
To: onyx
The fact that these people vote scares me. Most of them don't.
31
posted on
03/19/2004 1:56:18 PM PST
by
cinFLA
To: MrB
Your percentages are, I am afraid, too high as to the informed. In any given election for a particular position the truly informed voters measure in the single digits or less.
Our two-party system seems to lock in stupidy.
32
posted on
03/19/2004 2:01:05 PM PST
by
bvw
To: Political Junkie Too
I remember the Bloopers record advertisements from the 1970s where the news announcer refers to "Hoobert Heever."And the newscaster who made that famous blooper in 1931 was the legendary Harry Von Zell.
Von Zell retired from TV in the Fifties when George Burns' TV show went off the air. He came out of retirement in the Seventies to MC a classical music radio quiz show for high school students that aired on KFAC, then LA's classical station. (Von Zell was a classical music fanatic with the accent on opera.)
He died sometime in the Eighties, if I remember correctly.
33
posted on
03/19/2004 2:01:49 PM PST
by
Publius
(Will kein Gott auf Erden sein, sind wir selber Götter.)
To: rogueleader
Get them all right or be turned away at the polls How about 'get two right'?
34
posted on
03/19/2004 2:03:59 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
To: Tumbleweed_Connection
To: newsmeat.com
To: VRW Conspirator
i've called the kerry campaign , pretending not to know who this person HOOVER is to try to get an answer .....the people answering the phones had no idea !!
37
posted on
03/19/2004 3:13:34 PM PST
by
saxxa
(FIRE-FIGHTER FOR PRESIDENT BUSH)
To: Tumbleweed_Connection
When the libs continue to bring up Herbert Hoover as a bogeyman, they should think about what Harry Truman thought of the man. From the Truman Library's website:
In late May 1945, only six weeks after Roosevelt's death, Hoover met with President Harry Truman and the two men planned for the recovery of postwar Europe. At Truman's request, Hoover traveled the world to provide the president with a personal assessment of world food needs. More importantly, Hoover lobbied fellow Republicans to support Truman's food relief programs. In the summer of 1947, Truman agreed that Hoover should be chairman of the newly created Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch, later known as the Hoover Commission. As chairman, Hoover continued to work closely with President Truman to enact the commission's recommendations and to streamline post-war government. Hoover and Truman's work together forged a bond of friendship that lasted the rest of their lives.
To: Tumbleweed_Connection
You know this makes sense. The only reason I know what Fonda did in the 60's when I was a baby, was because I happened to be standing with my very kind Grandfather whom I can not ever remember saying any thing bad about anybody (except her),one day when she was mentioned on the tv. His reaction was one I will never forget! Traitor to the country was the nicest thing he had to say. It really left an impression to see that reaction from him.
Unless the GOP is willing to also give a history lesson like my grandfather gave me when they link those names with Kerry, it is a waste of time with the under 40 crowd.
To: rogueleader
Who was the first President of the United States? Samuel Huntington- September 28, 1779-July 9, 1781. First President of the United States under the Articles of Confederation.
Or, going even further back:
Peyton Randolph-September 5, 1774-October 21, 1774. First President of the Continental Congress.
40
posted on
03/19/2004 4:36:38 PM PST
by
nonliberal
(Graduate: Curtis E. LeMay School of International Relations)
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