Now playing on dirty.radio: Loading...

  Dirty Forums > world.
Register FAQ Community Today's Posts Search

Post Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #321  
Old 06-09-2008, 03:20 PM
Deckard
issue 37
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: South Wales
Posts: 1,244
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
I was making a general statement of those prejudices potential impact on undecided's.
Yes I know you were.

Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
I still stand by my hypothesis, though, because it is not an unfair generalisation and I reached it with reasonable methods that have not been proven wrong.

Hypothesis:
This is where 35-40% of people are Democrats and support democrats regardless, and 35-40% of people do the same for Republicans. The 20-30% in the middle, the people that have to make a decision, will sway the election IF one prejudice in their mind is more prevalent than the other.
And what are these "reasonable methods that have not been proven wrong"? What makes you so sure that white guilt or negative prejudice will play anything like the significant role that you suggest for this 20-30%? At least enough for you to come out with a statement like:

Quote:
It's really a battle of white guilt (supportive prejudice) vs. bigotry (negative prejudice).I don't believe it will come down to issues or principles, just which wins out in the "gut feelings" of the majority (white) voters
Tell me, IsiliRunite, how are you so sure?
  #322  
Old 06-09-2008, 03:52 PM
Strangelet
rico suave
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: lost in a romance
Posts: 815
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Deckard View Post
And what are these "reasonable methods that have not been proven wrong"? What makes you so sure that white guilt or negative prejudice will play anything like the significant role that you suggest for this 20-30%? At least enough for you to come out with a statement like:
awesome questions. Notice he's watered things down for his hypothesis to say nothing more than if people are swayed by irrational prejudices they will act in a prejudiced fashion and affect the outcome of the election. Which is fucking tautological. and doesn't quite get to the place where you can say something as smug as

Quote:
You give people too much credit if you think they are going to use reason.
and

Quote:
I am saying that a big factor in his ability to win the election depends on the outcome of white voters sub-consciously or consciously selecting one of those two prejudices more frequently than the other.
__________________
"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it."

- Mark Twain


Last edited by Strangelet; 06-09-2008 at 04:03 PM.
  #323  
Old 06-09-2008, 03:59 PM
Sean
Where in the world...?
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: US
Posts: 1,437
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Strangelet View Post
This is entertainment, Sean is missing out.
I've been keeping up with the discussion through you all quoting IsiliRunite.

It may be worth responding to IsiliRunite if he/she starts supporting his/her assertions with factual evidence rather than personal hypothesis, and more importantly, if he/she drops the habit of hurling personal insults at other board members like the one that was fired off at Sarcasmo in the smoking thread. Until then, it seems like a waste of effort.
__________________
Download all my remixes
  #324  
Old 06-09-2008, 04:09 PM
Strangelet
rico suave
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: lost in a romance
Posts: 815
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
If a white democrat can't beat George W. Bush, the worst president in history, why will a black candidate be able to beat one of the best maverick Senators and American war heroes, who is also white, of the last 25 years? The general election is a gongshow smear contest...its not about principles. If you are a democrat this should concern you!
I don't know. I guess because its statistically proven to be more difficult to vote out an incumbent president when there is a popular war just starting up. Just like its statistically proven to be more difficult to preserve your party's power over the presidency during an economic down-turn.

These are verifiable, provable trends, so that distinguishes them from your whitey-with-a-guilt-complex model.
__________________
"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it."

- Mark Twain

  #325  
Old 06-09-2008, 05:30 PM
gambit
magic city writer
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: not where I want to be
Posts: 807
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Obama has one thing that Kerry never had: charisma. And youth. And likability. Okay, so that's three things.
__________________
Read my webcomic, Magic City.
  #326  
Old 06-09-2008, 05:37 PM
cacophony
disquietude
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 893
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
I still stand by my hypothesis, though, because it is not an unfair generalisation and I reached it with reasonable methods that have not been proven wrong.
haha holy christ i'm glad i waited to put you on ignore. this was totally worth wading through the rest of your bullshit.

and now, join myrrh as the only other person i've chosen to put on my ignore list.
  #327  
Old 06-09-2008, 09:41 PM
IsiliRunite
de la Michigan
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Ann Arbor
Posts: 536
Send a message via AIM to IsiliRunite
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Because of the previous success of smear campaigns about irrelevant topics, like John Kerry's swift-boat saga, I think the proof is in the pudding that real issues aren't as important to "swing" voters as issues of personal character and personna.

More than 4-5% of Americans don't hold built-in allegiance ("I am a Republican" or "I am a Democrat") to either candidate, and that is the type of voter I'm speaking about. If all the non-Democrats and non-Republicans who have not made up their mind come election day step into the polling booth and vote in accordance with one prejudice over the other more frequently, it may have an effect on the election. Is that really hard to believe?

Aside from this bull-shit:

I don't need data to create a hypothesis. A hypothesis is pre-experiment, and I don't even have to be 'sure' about it. The experiment is the general election, and if you think my hypothesis is wrong...

The only assumption my hypothesis is making is that white guilt and negative prejudice exist. I think that's fair, reasonable. Even aside from that hypothesis, I believe Obama will take the election given a winner-take-all electoral college because he does not need votes in historically anti-African American states (slave and segregation states), which is the only place he has guaranteed trouble.

I am not claiming profundity, or universal truth, by mentioning my hypothesis. I was just bringing up a potential facet of the election I have not heard much about, seeing if anyone had anything to add. I guess when a person believes all of their words are groundbreaking or profound, they try to prove that everyone elses' words are not profound even if they did not submit their work to the board of review. Hence...the dirty debate team felt they could make a 'you-wrong-me-right' discussion out of nothing! Meddling kids...

Lighten up, people. Even if you are all competing with me, the debate should have been discussion in the first place, and we should all be on the same team...

So, dirty collectively believes Obama has too much going for him and too much going against McCain for prejudices to really matter. Alright, I will take your collective perspectives into account and reflect on them.

Last edited by IsiliRunite; 06-10-2008 at 04:32 AM.
  #328  
Old 06-10-2008, 06:36 AM
Deckard
issue 37
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: South Wales
Posts: 1,244
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
...So, dirty collectively believes Obama has too much going for him and too much going against McCain for prejudices to really matter.
No-one's suggesting prejudices won't be a factor in this election. Simply that we don't see any evidence that bigotry or white guilt will matter anything like as significantly as you suggested in your earlier unequivocal statements.

Subsequently typing the word hypothesis 647 times does nothing to explain that, my friend. Hypotheses can indeed come from limited evidence, but still require some evidence (otherwise you might as well be pulling them out your ass).

Offering up the swiftboat saga as an example only points to the power of smear campaigns, of appearing unpatriotic or dishonest. It tells us nothing about the prevalence of white guilt or bigotry.

So I'm still waiting...
  #329  
Old 06-10-2008, 09:49 AM
Sean
Where in the world...?
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: US
Posts: 1,437
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
Feeling especially patient today, so I temporarily suspended my one person ignore list.
Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
Because of the previous success of smear campaigns about irrelevant topics, like John Kerry's swift-boat saga, I think the proof is in the pudding that real issues aren't as important to "swing" voters as issues of personal character and personna.

More than 4-5% of Americans don't hold built-in allegiance ("I am a Republican" or "I am a Democrat") to either candidate, and that is the type of voter I'm speaking about.
Well now you're changing your story. You say 4-5% now, but earlier you said "20-30% in the middle, the people that have to make a decision, will sway the election IF one prejudice in their mind is more prevalent than the other."

And it appears that you're claiming the election will swing one way or another based primarily on which prejudice wins out, bigotry or white guilt. To quote nearly your entire first post, "It's really a battle of white guilt (supportive prejudice) vs. bigotry (negative prejudice). I don't believe it will come down to issues or principles, just which wins out in the "gut feelings" of the majority (white) voters".

I'm in the middle. A white, middle class, 35 year old registered independent with a high school education. I like Obama for the reasons that I believe the bulk of his supporters do. He's campaigning on the platform that we need to shift the direction the country is taking. He's respectful of opposing viewpoints. He's good at finding common ground. He wants to involve the American people in the political process more than we have been for nearly a decade. He's more willing to put what's right ahead of what's politically expedient. And he actually inspires people to get involved and to care about politics, an often overlooked plus for a President. Prejudices will of course be a factor, but I don't think there's evidence that they'll ultimately be the deciding factor, as you initially asserted.

Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
I am not claiming profundity, or universal truth, by mentioning my hypothesis. I was just bringing up a potential facet of the election I have not heard much about, seeing if anyone had anything to add.
Well now you're tempering your statements to a more reasonable level. But that doesn't change why people first jumped on your comments. Once again, I'll quote your first reply: "It's really a battle of white guilt (supportive prejudice) vs. bigotry (negative prejudice). I don't believe it will come down to issues or principles, just which wins out in the "gut feelings" of the majority (white) voters".

So for you to now say that:

Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
I guess when a person believes all of their words are groundbreaking or profound, they try to prove that everyone elses' words are not profound even if they did not submit their work to the board of review. Hence...the dirty debate team felt they could make a 'you-wrong-me-right' discussion out of nothing! Meddling kids...
...is a tad disingenuous.

Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
Lighten up, people. Even if you are all competing with me, the debate should have been discussion in the first place, and we should all be on the same team...
No one's competing with you. We were all just apparently taken off guard by the extreme nature of your initial post, and responded accordingly. Even you seem to have realized your comments were a bit beyond reality, because your subsequent posts have taken a very different stance, as I mentioned at the top of this reply.

Quote:
Originally Posted by IsiliRunite View Post
So, dirty collectively believes Obama has too much going for him and too much going against McCain for prejudices to really matter. Alright, I will take your collective perspectives into account and reflect on them.
I actually do feel that they "really matter", but I don't think they'll play a deciding role in the election. I think they really matter more in a sense that prejudices existing on the level they do are a social problem we need to continue working towards solving.
__________________
Download all my remixes

Last edited by Sean; 06-10-2008 at 01:32 PM.
  #330  
Old 06-10-2008, 01:21 PM
jOHN rODRIGUEZ
SystematicallyDisadsomthg
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: THE PLAsTIC VOORRTEEXXX!!!
Posts: 3,572
Re: U.S. Presidential Election 2008
I'm going over visit some music threads.
__________________
8=====)~~(=====8

Post Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:51 PM.


Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.