‘Journalists’, feel some shame for your profession


So I checked the lead political story on CNN:

CNN poll: It’s a dead heat

Then I checked the lead political story on MSNBC:

NBC/WSJ poll: Very close race with one day to go

Feeling desperate, I even checked Fox News:

CLOSING TIME: In Final Hours, Are
There Still Undecideds Left to Swing?

Do you sense a theme? It’s one that we’ve suffered with for the entire election season: news media that are obsessed with the horse race rather than the issues.

Fuck the media. Only xkcd sees the truth.

And tomorrow is the race itself, with non-stop coverage of exit polls, with maps showing trends, and predictions, and declaring that one state has gone to one candidate or the other — it’s all our media live for, I think, is the ultimate orgasm of who wins, rather than the substance of the consequences of electing either of these people.

I hate them. I hate them all. I will not be watching any of those channels, I will not be visiting their websites at all tomorrow: I am going to vote and then I am going to shut out the yammering ninnies for the whole day, and I will check my newspaper for who the winner was on Wednesday. I might be nice and create an election day thread for you all here, but I will not be reading it myself.

The real election campaign is long over. We were supposed to have news that clearly discussed the differences and similarities between the two. We didn’t get that, so now we get numbers filtered out of noise.


Also, Salon’s top two articles on tomorrow’s election are all about the polls…but they also have an article by Robert Reich on Romney’s destructive policies. More of that, please. I don’t give a damn about the polls — the only one that counts is the election itself.

Comments

  1. Hank Fox says

    Right there with you, PZ. I’m totally ignoring TV and radio tomorrow.

    (And I hope all you US residents are voting tomorrow, voting — if I can throw in this partisan bit — for Obama. Plus lots of Democrats in Congress.)

  2. Tualha says

    I’m so tired of phrases like “if Romney wins” and “who wins the election”. The actual winners will be plutocrats and the religious right on the one hand, or women, minorities, gays, and the poor on the other hand (at least in relative terms).

  3. says

    Most media have been determined to cast the presidential election as a neck-and-neck horse race throughout the campaign — even when Obama had a commanding lead in the polls it was always “too close to call.” Today polls show a resilient Obama edge in the popular vote that is magnified in an Electoral College advantage that he never lost. Still “too close to call” or even to acknowledge the genuine difference. What we have is not only an avoidance of political content and what the two candidates stand for, it’s also an avoidance of anything contradicting the theme of a practically tied vote.

  4. eric says

    We were supposed to have news that clearly discussed the differences and similarities between the two. We didn’t get that, so now we get numbers filtered out of noise.

    I agree there is a lot of noise, but frankly if someone doesn’t know the difference (and the sames) between Romney and Obama by now, its their own fault, not mass media’s.

    I’m much more concerned with the abysmal lack of coverage or interest in local politics. Bond measures, constitutional amendments, propositions, school board elections, etc. Sometimes a big one will get some news coverage, but 90% of them get absolutely nothing. I would guess that most local political elections get decided by whether you have a (D) or (R) next to your name, with the voters knowing absolutely nothing else about the candidates or their positions.

  5. says

    Halo 4 comes out tomorrow so it should be pretty easy to find something to do other than watch the news after you’ve cast your ballot.

  6. johnhodges says

    There is still hope that the election will remain undecided for awhile. Between post=Sandy problems running the election in the NorthEast, and all that “provisional ballot” stuff in Ohio (which cannot even be counted for a couple of weeks), assorted “absentee ballot” counting disputes in close states, it may go in for weeks yet.

  7. Pteryxx says

    I just hope there’ll be internet live coverage of voter suppressions happening at the polls. (Well, not hope, more like disgust and apprehension that it’s necessary.) (And internet coverage, because damn if any large-scale media source would cover such a story if it flew up and yarked in their faces.)

  8. says

    Will there be exit polls? My understanding is that they were abandoned after 2000, when it was shown that 11% of all self-described Democrats voted directly for Bush, giving lie to the much whined claim that Nader was responsible for the Bush regieme. There were no official national exit polls in 2004 and 2008, because fast were just too damn inconvenient for the media pundits and talking heads.

  9. says

    @Tualha #3 – I disagree. Regardless of whether Romney takes or Obama keeps the White House, the winners will still be the plutocrats: everyone else will lose. The only question is which group of plutocrats will come out on top.

  10. anteprepro says

    Regardless of whether Romney takes or Obama keeps the White House, the winners will still be the plutocrats: everyone else will lose.

    Yeah, because Romney will surely throw the religious right under the bus such that they will “lose” either way. We all know how poorly the religious right are treated in America! Because Obama will surely mistreat gays, women, and minorities equally as much as a Romney administration. We all know how Republicans are so tolerant and permissive! Because Obama and Romney are just as pro-plutocrat as one another. We are all know how Republicans are just as willing to tax businesses and rich people as Democrats are! And just as willing to help the poor as well! And don’t even bother looking into their policies on war! So identical that it will make your brain spin! No differences at all. Nuh uh.

  11. ericgonzalez says

    More often than not, I find more true things in one single XKCD strip than in an entire newspaper.

  12. Doug Little says

    I’ll call it right now, Obama has too good of a lead in the battleground states to loose the EC. The national polls have shifted toward Obama over the last few days to give him a slight edge in the popular vote. Like Nate Silver says, there would have to be a bias toward Obama in both the State and National polls for Romney to win.

  13. Pteryxx says

    There were no official national exit polls in 2004 and 2008, because [facts] were just too damn inconvenient for the media pundits and talking heads.

    (fix’d)

    Also because exit polls were contradicting the results from voting machines. (Therefore, the exit polls must be inherently flawed and unreliable, QED.) *spits*

  14. joed says

    odd the way the exit polls had evolved into a very accurate predictor of an election until the 2000 election. Seems exit polls no longer predict the outcome of an election.

  15. says

    @Pteryxx #15

    Also because exit polls were contradicting the results from voting machines.

    I forgot about that, thanks. Yup, it just Would Not Do when you have exit polls naming X the clear winner and then have Y win by a landslide. So, no more exit polls.

  16. joed says

    @10, Gregory in Seattle
    blockquote Regardless of whether Romney takes or Obama keeps the White House, the winners will still be the plutocrats: everyone else will lose. The only question is which group of plutocrats will come out on top./blockquote

    yes! the voter is screwed regardless of who is elected.

  17. says

    @ anteprepro

    And don’t even bother looking into their policies on war!

    Apropros of that, there was an interview on CNN where the interviewee suggested that in spite of all rMoney’s bluster (here wrt Iran), it is Obama who actually has the power to undertake a more hardline stance (not that he would necessarily want to). This is because rMoney simply won’t have the werewithall to undertake any action for the next two years or so. He has to put the people in place first. And that takes time. Not even to speak of the connections he would have to put together with allies and enemies alike. Obama IS currently in this position.

    In like manner: It is not about the economy. If it was about the economy, even if one argues that Obama is an idjit, he is currently in a far better position to undertake anything. If rMoney were to cobble together an administration, he would only be able to go back to the failed Rethuglican advisors of Bush, or (more likely) have to draw from a less partisan selection of advisors – likely the same Obama would be working with.

    My (relatively unpartisan ) suggestion, is that if one wants a president that can do ANYTHING in a hurry, one’s only choice is Obama. That is the cold, practical reality of it all.

    PS: I think it is good for Obama that everything is painted as “very close”. It Will push his supporters into voting. (I suspect this effect will be more marked among Democrats.)

  18. says

    Halo 4 comes out tomorrow so it should be pretty easy to find something to do other than watch the news after you’ve cast your ballot.

    My plan is to vote early and finally finish Resident Evil 6 while DarkInfant is napping. I’ll probably catch the Daily Show’s coverage at the end of the day, but that’s it.

  19. joed says

    @10, Gregory in Seattle

    Regardless of whether Romney takes or Obama keeps the White House, the winners will still be the plutocrats: everyone else will lose. The only question is which group of plutocrats will come out on top.

    yes! the voter is screwed regardless of who is elected. And your vote hasn’t counted in over 12 years. The vote machines versus the exit polls.
    Your vote is worthless.

  20. chigau (棒や石) says

    In 2000 wasn’t George W appointed by the supreme court?
    As opposed to “winning”?

  21. scrawnykayaker says

    And if Rmoney “wins,” will these same media report about the concerns of voter suppression and vote-machine rigging? Barely, if at all. We’ll all be thinking it, but they won’t be discussing it.

    Voter suppression has been covered some, but is it treated as the national scandal it is? Not that I’ve seen. There should be visible OUTRAGE that one party’s leadership broadly believes that people who are likely to disagree with them are not fit to vote.

    Vote-rigging risk concerns are, as far as I’ve seen, confined to alt. media and the pajamahadeen. You could argue that it’s not news until it happens, but that hasn’t prevented discussion of the possible effects of curtailing early voting hours, which is also speculative.

    I can’t really see any reason to support machines with no physical ballot unless you are planning to steal elections. The right-wing’s support for voter suppression says all you need to know about their respect for the sanctity of voting.

  22. Pteryxx says

    Someone linked this over at A+ forum: a statistical analysis demonstrating vote-shifting in direct proportion to precinct size. I wish I’d seen it sooner.

    http://www.ukprogressive.co.uk/breaking-retired-nsa-analyst-proves-gop-is-stealing-elections/article20598.html

    He looked at every 2010 race in Arizona from Governor Brewer to Senator McCain and Congresswoman Gabby Giffords. The trends lines all did the exact same thing. Someone had manipulated the election outcome, most likely one person inserting a programme inside the system’s central computer… that flipped votes.

    The results were astounding.

    They showed that Governor Brewer actually lost her election and Gabby Gifford’s razor thin less than 1% point re-election victory over Tea Party Conservative Jesse Kelly was closer to a 20 point victory for her.

    Duniho added, “We need to have strong hand count audits to confirm the integrity of these elections. This means comparing hand counts with official reports of the election.”

    According to the article, vote flips happen at a rate less than 10%, adjusted for precinct size, which is a pattern selected to avoid showing statistical significance in any one precinct.

  23. gussnarp says

    A while back I saw a headline on an election story saying there was a possible “Nightmare Scenario” with Ohio votes. I thought it was going to be about our illustrious Secretary of State, John Husted, who has done everything in his power to suppress the vote and insure a Romney win and how he was trying to confuse voters, avoid counting provisional ballots, and stop early voting, especially in Democratic leaning counties and the potential for real voter fraud from the top.

    It wasn’t. It was about the fact that provisional ballots in Ohio do not get counted on election night, and there might be a lot of them, so we MIGHT NOT KNOW WHO WON ON ELECTION NIGHT/WEDNESDAY MORNING!!!!111! ZOMG!!!111!!

    Yeah, that’s not a nightmare scenario for anyone except the media. Don’t tell me your nightmare is my nightmare, it’s not. In fact, I’d like to see exit polling and any release of results before all votes are counted outlawed. If Afghanistan can wait for donkeys to carry paper ballots out of the mountains, we can wait until all votes are counted twice, by default, and a single, solid result is announced at one appointed time.

  24. says

    It’s one that we’ve suffered with for the entire election season: news media that are obsessed with the horse race rather than the issues.

    I was sure you were talking about today’s Melbourne Cup horse race in Australia for a moment there…

  25. Randomfactor says

    In 2000 wasn’t George W appointed by the supreme court?

    Florida Legislature, actually.

  26. gussnarp says

    @Matt Penfold –

    In general, when you show up at a polling place your name is checked on a list and you are handed a ballot and you vote and that ballot gets counted.

    If your name is not on the list (usually because you are at the wrong polling place or precinct), or if it has been marked off as having received an absentee ballot, then you can still get a ballot and vote, but it is a provisional ballot. That means you have to fill out more information and provide identification so that your ballot can be checked against the records. Basically, they look at your name and see if you voted at a different polling place already or if your absentee ballot already came in. If so, your provisional ballot is trashed, if not it is counted. All this takes considerable time, and if the vote is not close enough for your provisional ballot to matter, it doesn’t happen at all.

    I think this is all state by state, as most election law is, so your results may vary.

  27. gussnarp says

    Some reasons provisional ballots are important is that a lot of people don’t know their polling place, and it can sometimes change without them being aware of it. What also happens is that more than one precinct votes in the same polling place (there are several at my polling place). Say you show up at the right polling place but don’t know your precinct. My precinct this year is 25-e. Another year it was 25-k. So maybe I didn’t check and just assumed it was the same, so I get in the 25-k line. My name’s not on the list, so I get a provisional ballot. Or maybe they ask me my address and then say, oh no, you’re in 25-f, that’s the next table over. So I go to 25-f and I’m still not on the list and I say, but they told me to come here. Then the poll worker says, OK, fill out this provisional ballot.

    Part of the Ohio issue is that Husted didn’t want to count these “poll worker error” ballots, where the voter was sent to the wrong precinct by the poll worker. Why? because rich, old, white republicans who’ve been voting for years don’t make these mistakes.

    Another solution to this problem is the permanent ink method used in Iraq and Afghanistan. You just show up and vote, but your finger gets marked with permanent ink and if you try to vote with an inky finger, you’re out of luck.

    That doesn’t solve the absentee ballot. If you’ve been sent an absentee ballot and still turn up to vote, what if you’ve already sent in the absentee ballot? Can’t have you vote twice, so provisional ballot it is. Now maybe you got the absentee ballot just in case, but changed your mind. Or maybe your Republican Secretary of State sent out absentee ballot requests on official forms to every voter in the state, ostensibly to expand ballot access. But what really happens? First time voters, people who just aren’t as informed, or anyone in a hurry just sees this official form and thinks they have to fill it out to vote, so they do. Then they get an absentee ballot in the mail and they think, well I don’t want to vote absentee. I don’t trust that, I’m going to my polling place. Thus, they get a provisional ballot. Which Husted doesn’t want to count if they screw up even the tiniest technicality, including putting the wrong ID information on the form, even though Ohio law says the poll worker is supposed to put the ID information on the form.

    I’m pretty sure Husted sent out those absentee ballot request forms intentionally to confuse some voters, causing them to vote provisionally, hoping that Democratic voters screw up more than Republican voters and he can avoid counting those votes.

  28. eric says

    @16 and @17 – I hate exit polls and think the US should do what Europe does, and impose a media blackout on election day. So I refuse to answer them. Or consider voters who refuse to participate because they don’t have the time; there’s going to be a built-in bias against them and I they’re generally going to be the less wealthy voters. That means the exit polls could easily have a built-in systemic bias that makes them less reliable than expected.

    I share your skepticism about voting machines being reliable, but if I had to guess which one was more reliable – exit polls or the machines – I’d guess that most of the time, its the machines.

  29. Rey Fox says

    In 2008, I spent most of the day driving my brother across Wyoming and Idaho. Good times.

    This year, there’s a volleyball game to go to, that should help.

  30. Pteryxx says

    I share your skepticism about voting machines being reliable, but if I had to guess which one was more reliable – exit polls or the machines – I’d guess that most of the time, its the machines.

    Except that there’s a long history of documented reliability of exit polls compared to actual pre-voting-machine ballot counts. Any biases due to the nature of exit polls already have been accounted for during their use.

  31. anteprepro says

    Florida Legislature, actually.

    The Pfft:

    Bush v. Gore, 531 U.S. 98 (2000), is the United States Supreme Court decision that effectively resolved the dispute surrounding the 2000 presidential election in favor of George W. Bush…..

    In a per curiam decision, the Court ruled that the Florida Supreme Court’s method for recounting ballots was a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The reason for this was the lack of equal treatment of all the ballots cast in Florida. The Court also ruled that no alternative method could be established within the time limits set by Title 3 of the United States Code (3 U.S.C.), § 5 (Determination of controversy as to appointment of electors), which is December 12. Three concurring justices also asserted that the Florida Supreme Court had violated Article II, § 1, cl. 2 of the Constitution, by misinterpreting Florida election law that had been enacted by the Florida Legislature.

    I notice that the kind of people who oppose “activist judges” didn’t bat an eyelash when “UNELECTED JUDGES!!1!” decided the outcome of a Presidential election.

  32. gussnarp says

    @Gregory in Seattle

    My understanding is that they were abandoned after 2000… There were no official national exit polls in 2004 and 2008, because fast were just too damn inconvenient for the media pundits and talking heads.

    Um, no. There are always exit polls. There were exit polls in 2004 and 2008 and there will be this year. There’s never been such a thing as an “official” exit poll. There’s nothing official about them. Various media outlets commission them, usually several come together to commission one big one, but it’s not official. The media certainly haven’t, and aren’t going to stop doing them.

  33. duce7999 says

    I can’t believe that the election is tomorrow and I am still UNDECIDED. I just can’t make up my mind. Should I vote for Obama before work, or should I do it after?

  34. says

    They should be covering the absolute outrage of voter suppression by Republican legislators and Governors. And by Republican Secretaries of State who are in charge of running elections.

    Here’s a 4:36 minute video that documents just one of the long, long early voting lines in Ohio.

    More on the story here: Link.

    Cleveland Plain Dealer link.

    Ohio Secretary of State Jon Husted has had his voter suppression efforts defeated by court challenges at least twice. But he is not giving up. He still managed to restrict early voting hours, if not early voting days, and he is currently promoting rules that will result in more than 40,000 provisional ballots being thrown away. He is also conducting yet another bogus purge of voting roles.

    Nine-hour long voting lines in Florida don’t faze Republican Governor Rick Scott. No matter how long the line are in urban (mostly minority) communities, he will not allow early voting to be extended. In Florida, early voting ended yesterday. Previous Florida Governors did extend early voting days. But then Obama won, so the mandate to restrict the vote got very serious indeed.

  35. Josh, Official SpokesGay says

    Matt–yes, they are. Remember, exit polls, as gussnarp noted, are not in any sense official or government-endorsed. They’re private endeavors by the media. As soon as the media have any numbers at all from them they go on about them constantly, reporting any shift up or down by the second. It’s a clusterfuck.

  36. Pteryxx says

    Well well well…

    The National Election Pool, the consortium created in 1990 that sponsors the exit polls for each election cycle, has decided for the first time in a presidential election year to reduce the number of states in which it will conduct surveys.

    The consortium, which includes the television networks and The Associated Press, now contracts with Edison Research in Somerville, N.J., to survey voters nationally, within the 50 states, plus the District of Columbia.

    The networks and The Associated Press have decided to omit exit polls in states deemed noncompetitive this year, taking into consideration the presidential, Senate and gubernatorial races, as well as referendums. Information about voters in those states – their age, race, sex and other pertinent data – will not be available for the future.

    http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/10/04/election-exit-polls-are-eliminated-in-19-states/

  37. Matt Penfold says

    Matt–yes, they are. Remember, exit polls, as gussnarp noted, are not in any sense official or government-endorsed. They’re private endeavors by the media. As soon as the media have any numbers at all from them they go on about them constantly, reporting any shift up or down by the second. It’s a clusterfuck.

    We have them in the UK as well, and whilst I don’t think there is a law about releasing them whilst polling is still taking place, the media do not report the results until 10pm when the polling stations close. As a result they do not shift.

  38. Pteryxx says

    should’ve followed up…

    The networks and The Associated Press have decided to omit exit polls in states deemed noncompetitive this year,

    Any bets on “noncompetitive” states having surprise! GOP victories tomorrow?

  39. gussnarp says

    Maybe the whole election should just be an online poll. Then we can Pharyngulate it. I realize there are some Libertarians and some who would vote Green, but I think enough of us would probably all pull together to put Obama over the top in the end, knowing that if we really split our vote three ways, the fundies would overwhelm us.

  40. rookieatheist says

    Although it could possibly send most US media outlets into permanent shock, one possibility would be to propose a moratorium on announcing election poll results and election campaigning in the last, say, 48 hours before the election itself. Such a moratorium is used in France with varying degrees of success. It’s not a hundred per cent effective, but it helps to give the voting public a bit of non-crazy time before casting their vote.

  41. gussnarp says

    @Pteryxx – In this case I’m quite willing to believe it’s just a cost cutting measure. A surprise result in a non-competitive state would still result in massive controversy, with or without exit polls.

    The sad part is the lack of demographic data on voters. There are some really interesting studies done on voting habits that use that data, and they can be interesting even in states that overall are non-competitive.

  42. mikeyb says

    Mainstream Journalism is long dead. By and large these guys are Citizens United corporatist shills. I’m convinced they cover the race only as entertainment and a horserace largely because the top reporters make a gazillion dollars and the networks in advertizing no matter who wins. Most of the top media whether it be NBC, CBS or Faux, are one percenters who wont be hardly effected at all by the coming destruction of the social safety net and complete outsourcing of the remainder of our manufacturing base by the banksters and energy companies that really run this country. In other words again its profit over people. I will vote for corporate lite – Obama rather than Gordon Gekko, mainly because the supreme court could be the tipping point between overturning reproductive rights and strenghtening corporatist personhood. I have no illusions that we are on the long road towards corporatism, started with Reagan, but I have the hope we can stem the tide, at least for a while. Perhaps someday workers will be so sufficiently beat down that moronic America will wake up and actually really elect progressives, ala FDR. For now we must elect the faux progressive Barack Obama, there is simply no other alternative.

  43. Amphiox says

    One has to wonder to what extent this media sensationalization of adversarialism contributes to the political divisions that wrack the nation.

  44. says

    In addition to endless poll watching, some journalists are covering the nastiness that’s surfaced during the early voting process:

    If Election Day goes anything like the past 17 days of early voting in North Carolina, here’s what you can expect at your local precincts on Tuesday:

    Belligerent citizens demanding the right to personally inspect the voting process and yelling “shut up” at the top of their lungs when election officials tell them that only official poll observers can do that.

    Official poll observers who have been improperly trained by the groups they represent and think it’s their job to interrogate voters rather than just watch.

    Long lines, which means that a lot of people end up waiting outside the designated no-electioneering zones, getting harangued by campaign workers.

    Shouting matches between Republican and Democratic campaign workers — and sometimes voters standing in line — that can involve name-calling, threatening gestures, and the summoning of law enforcement. …

    Link.

  45. unclefrogy says

    the thing that amazes me the most I guess about people in general and how it is expressed in elections and the campaigns is the dominance of ignorance and irrationality that seems to be encouraged by the politicians especially the republicans and the media.
    the most important things seem to be entertainment and images. Politics as spectacle, with sports language one team vs another team. The feeling that voting makes no difference the seeming sameness of the parties.

    so long as the public has its bread and circuses, TV and gasoline no one really cares.
    war, health care, education, the economy, privacy vs security?

    NFL, NBA, Prime Time TV, Tivo & Netflics & twiter !

    uncle frogy

  46. unclefrogy says

    Robert Reich is really great. He does have a way of saying things wonderfully bluntly.
    uncle frogy

  47. laurentweppe says

    They should be covering the absolute outrage of voter suppression by Republican legislators and Governors. And by Republican Secretaries of State who are in charge of running elections.

    Cheaters caught cheating again
    That should be the headline systematically used every-single-time
    Don’t let them pull a Lance Armstrong on your political system.

  48. Michael says

    We had a comment on Canadian radio this morning that the ‘Undecided’ in the U.S. election prefer to vote for the winner, thus feeling that they didn’t waste their vote. So if the polls indicate a clear winner, then the undecided will vote for them. By claiming that the race is neck and neck, the media can therefore trick the undecided to vote for either candidate.

    John Cleese put out an interesting video about proportional representation a few years back. I wish we would adopt it in Canada, since our system of government is easily adapted to it, although the U.S. congress might work. Basically if 40% of the voters vote for Party A, then 40% of the government representatives are Party A, if only 5% are for Party F, then 5% of the g.r. are Party F. So your vote is never wasted, and the goverment represents the voter demographic. Whether they would have problems with majority votes is another issue.

  49. Old At Heart says

    @58: It was put to a vote a while back in Canada, but the people said no to it. It was apparently really badly worded and communicated by the majority at the time (the majority are the beneficiaries of NOT having this system).

  50. says

    Geek alert! Here’s a topic journalists can and should attack immediately, as it may affect the reported outcome of the vote in Ohio. Remember Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted, the guy who had to be told by the courts that he couldn’t specify more early voting days and longer hours of operation only for predominately Republican counties? The guy who had to be forced by the Court to reestablish some early voting days? The guy who fired two Democratic Party election workers without cause? The guy who is now running his second purge of voters from the roles without enough time allowed to process his numerous errors?

    That guy, it turns out, also arranged to have new software installed on voting tabulation machines in every Iowa county. He did this without going through the usual testing and approval channels.

    All the geeky details, including images of the software contract are now available in several places, including here and here.

    … “The method of execution chosen,” for this effort, notes March in his affidavit for the Fitrakis/Arnebeck injunction lawsuit, “is unspeakably stupid, excessively complex and insanely risky. In medical terms it is the equivalent of doing open heart surgery as part of a method of removing somebody’s hemorrhoids. Whoever came up with this idea is either the dumbest Information Technology ‘professional’ in the US or has criminal intent against the Ohio election process.”…

  51. says

    More links for Jon Husted’s dirty computer tricks in Ohio, tricks that may affect vote tabulation in Ohio:

    http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2012/4779

    This uncertified and untested software could easily malfunction and corrupt votes on the central tabulation machines, thus destroying any electronic record of the actual votes by citizens. This “experimental” software, as outlined in the contract, has no security protocols. A “man in the middle” attack, like the one that stole the Ohio election for George W. Bush in 2004, could be directly facilitated by this untested and uncertified software installation.

    http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2012/4782

    The mainstream media did not report on Searcy’s ties to the Tea Party in their parroting of Searcy’s statements without corroborating evidence. Media sources also failed to note that Ms. Searcy is Vice-Chair of the Hamilton County Republican Party.

    http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Lawsuit-Ohio-voting-machines-could-alter-votes-4009994.php

    An election-eve lawsuit filed Monday alleges that software in some Ohio voting machines makes the machines vulnerable to having votes altered after they are cast.
    The federal lawsuit involving machines made by Omaha, Neb.-based Election Systems and Software alleges that software on the machines could allow vote manipulation by non-election board officials….

    The lawsuit asks a judge to order Ohio’s elections chief Jon Husted not to use the machines Tuesday and to break state contracts with ES&S for voting machines to be used this year.

    The machines are in Ohio’s 25 most populous counties, said Columbus attorney Cliff Arnebeck, who filed the lawsuit.

    Right, the “most populous counties.” I wrote up-thread that the software change was made in all Ohio counties. I should have known better. Jon Husted has consistently tried to suppress or rig the vote only in the areas dominated by Obama supporters.

    The lawsuit was the second last-minute complaint filed over voting in battleground Ohio. A second federal judge is considering union claims that Husted’s office improperly changed rules for noting the type of identification used on provisional ballots.

    I hope Husted arouses the ire of geeks. He won’t know what hit him.

  52. joed says

    @24, Pteryxx
    If people would read this @24 and take it seriously they would understand their vote is worthless.
    @24 describes one main method of vote manipulation.
    Folks your vote is worthless.
    There are other methods of vote manipulation.
    Broken US System Needs Watching:
    International Election Observers Could Face Arrest
    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article32939.htm

  53. anteprepro says

    Oh joed. You read an article about how Republicans are rigging the system in favor of Republicans, and your conclusion is to support your same old garbled “Can’t Change A Thing” milquetoast, apathetic nonsense. The takeaway from that article should be that it is yet another way that Republicans are way fucking worse than Democrats, and should be incentive to vote and keep an eye on things, because if the support for Democrats is overwhelming, the fraud will either be pointless or need to be ramped up enough to become obvious. And it is also good news: The Democrat support is out there. It just needs to be mobilized and, if this fraud is actually happening, the tamperers need to be caught. But to ignore all that in order to weave the article into your “don’t bother voting, everything is too awful” narrative was awful sweet of you.

  54. Sophia, Michelin-starred General of the First Mediterranean Iron Chef Batallion says

    So, as usual, it comes down to this.

    It’s always a choice between silly candidates, isn’t it?

  55. Ichthyic says

    If people would read this @24 and take it seriously they would understand their vote this post is worthless.

    yes, cupcake, as all your other posts, this one too is worthless.

    run along and play.