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In praise of the dragging down Boomers


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2014 Oct 15, 5:35am   31,493 views  110 comments

by Tenpoundbass   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

http://money.cnn.com/2014/10/14/retirement/retire-abroad-benefits/index.html?iid=HP_LN

Panama offers the silver-haired set discounts on utility and doctor's bills and even gives them cheaper mortgages. In nearby Ecuador, seniors 65 and older get sales tax refunds, half-price bus and plane tickets and front-of-the-line privileges everywhere from the bank to airport customs. "They really treat senior citizens with a lot of respect," said Susan Schenck, a retired teacher who moved from California to Ecuador four years ago. "I'm 58, and I can't wait until I'm 65." Some countries, like the Philippines, have government agencies devoted to attracting foreign retirees. Meanwhile, others have streamlined their visa process and introduced low...

#housing

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83   marcus   2014 Oct 17, 2:42pm  

I hope you're drinking, because you are full of shit.

thunderlips11 says

Even split in the younger boomers, and a Regan victory among older boomers and younger Silents.

The boomers born between 1960 and 1964 were too young to vote. The boomers born between 1951 and 1960 favored Carter slightly. As for the ones older (the oldest 5 years), they were in the next 15 year group, which is dominated by people older than boomers.

thunderlips11 says

As you can see, the 30-44 group is a full 35% of the voters in this exit poll - outclassing by DOUBLE any other voting group - making them "The Deciders."

Yes it's an exit poll. Obviously skewed, because that was obviously not the percentage of people that voted in that age range. I've already been in this discussion far too much, considering that you haven't learned anything.

Maybe in years down the road, when you aren't aware that you learned it from me, you will understand that the boomers aren't quite as big a segment of the population, or of the voters as you used to think they were.

I never argued that the boomers were espcially progressive. THere are just as many idiots among the boomers as there are in any of these other 10 similar sized current age groups:

humanity says

age 21 - 48, age 26 - 51, age 31 - 54, age 36 - 57, age 41 - 61, age 46 - 65, age 51 - 69, age 56 - 77, age 61 - 86, age 66 - 100.

But you haven't just been saying the boomers aren't progressive, you've been assigning blame, like somehow they are worse than other age groups or like you really dont have a good feeling for proportion and numbers.

I still say your an asshole. If it was just mean sprited, or emotionally clouded, that would be one thing. But it's actually outright retarded. You belong with your buddy Dan. Two arrogant prick peas in a pod.

84   Dan8267   2014 Oct 17, 2:47pm  

humanity says

Exactly. Thank you for making your own argument.

Then your argument does not apply. I have provided ample evidence of the wrongdoings of the Boomers. Half the world's wildlife didn't kill itself during the Boomer's reign. Just because you choose to ignore the evidence doesn't make it go away.

humanity says

The one sure way to tell Dan is losing an argument is when he resorts to saying saying how samrt he thinks he is, as if that's an argument.

Actually, I was illustrating how stupid and childish you are.

humanity says

Who argues like this ?

Someone who is tired of the disingenuous arguments of village idiots.

The first dozen times you make lame Straw Men arguments I may politely point out the fallacy, but there are limits to even my patience for fools.

85   Dan8267   2014 Oct 17, 2:50pm  

SoftShell says

your definition of "we" is too narrow.

The "sentient machine" does not exist without the atoms. To exclude the atoms that comprise the sentient being is to exclude the very building blocks of creation.

SoftShell trying metaphysics? That's like a baboon trying metaphysics.

Sentience is an emergency property of the complex arrangement of atoms, not a function of specific instances of the elements. Swapping one hydrogen atom for another makes no difference to the system. A person is not the particular atoms that make up his body, but rather the effects of complex electrical and chemical reactions resulting from the organization of atoms into far more complex structures.

86   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 17, 2:50pm  

marcus says

Yes it's an exit poll. Obviously skewed, because that was obviously not the percentage of people that voted in that age range. I've already been in this discussion far too much, considering that you haven't learned anything.

Marcus, what do you think it is theat Exit Polls do?

They ask people how they voted, how much money they made, etc.

I neglected to source my screenshots:
http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu/elections/how_groups_voted/voted_88.html

It has vote totals for all the Presidential Elections. It has the relative age percentages of the random samples of voters from all over the country, so you can see how the bullshit claim of being swamped by Old Fucks is.

If they had 35% of respondents Boomers, that's what the percentage of Boomers was walking out the Schoolhouse/Post Office/Armory Door, hence, they voted. These aren't guesses. You do realize this is the primary tool Jimmah Carter and the OECD and others use to verify fair elections, right?

Why do Progressive Boomers feel the need to fight the reality about the voting record of Boomers overall?

Do you really think the miniscule sized Silents/Luckies are the ones to blame for every election in the past 32 years and Babyboomers were totally AWOL with no agency?

87   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 17, 3:54pm  

Last post for the night. 1994 Elections.

Contract with America: Attack of the "Angry White Man". Congress shifts for first time in almost half a century*.

Republicans take House for the first time since 1954, gain in Senate and State Governors.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_House_of_Representatives_elections,_1994

I tried to find the original NYT source but they don't have the graphics in the archives.

Look at those Whites, age 30-44. Peak, prime adulthood for the Boomers. Just the people in a 14-year band were 28% of the electorate, too.

This is just 2 years after Clinton's narrow win among Boomers in 1992, even with spoiler Perot in the race.

* When those evil racist Old Silents and Greatests voted out the Republicans in 1954, and landed them a bigger defeat in 1958. This off-year election will confirm Boomers as Right-leaning as a group, and represents the biggest defeat for a party since the aforementioned 1958 elections.

88   marcus   2014 Oct 17, 4:18pm  

I know what an exit poll is. In fact I know a lot about statistics.

Exit polls are not only subject to a margin of error, they also can be conducted with methodologies that don't accurately represent the overall population. IF that's not a misprint, then they knowingly made 35% of the people in their exit poll in that 14 year age group, after concluding that percentage was was representative for that age range in the overall population, and that makes little sense to me. Maybe it has to do with the low turnout for that election being low and that age group turning out way more. They probably got out the family values crowd in the bible belt out in record numbers.

35% of the voters in that election were between 30 and 44 sounds high to me. But it's irrelevant, say it is 35%. It's probably not that far off.

So say that the boomers were 35%. THat doesn't make them the deciders. What kind of twisted logic, makes them the deciders ? IF you had 3 people voting, would one person be the decider ? Here we have I don't know, maybe 90 million people voting, and way more than that not voting, because they don't even care enough to vote, and you think that because (maybe)35% of the (less than half who voted) being baby boomers makes them responsible for the out come ? I mean we all are responsible, including the many that didn't vote. But this just makes no sense.

IF we believe the exit polls, boomers were way better about voting than other age groups.

I'm done here. I honestly don't begin to comprehend the blame you assign. THat is I honestly do not see that you have a legitimate point of view here. Often when I'm arguing with someone, I at least understand what it is they think and or why.

In this case this is total blind hate and extreme stupidity that allows you to reach such a bizarre conclusion.

Dan8267 says

Half the world's wildlife didn't kill itself during the Boomer's reign.

"The boomers reign." Unbelievable.

89   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 1:08am  

marcus says

So say that the boomers were 35%. THat doesn't make them the deciders. What kind of twisted logic, makes them the deciders ? IF you had 3 people voting, would one person be the decider ? Here we have I don't know, maybe 90 million people voting, and way more than that not voting, because they don't even care enough to vote, and you think that because (maybe)35% of the (less than half who voted) being baby boomers makes them responsible for the out come ? I mean we all are responsible, including the many that didn't vote. But this just makes no sense.

35% of the electorate isn't a huge chunk?

Your idea is that the old fucks keep taking all the elections and overpowering the Boomers by votes. Look at 1988. If you add up the boomers - with only one year of Silents overlapping in the 30-44 group to the youngest cohort - in this case the last of the boomers and the first Gen X'ers, you got 55% of the vote. That's a majority.

No age group in 1988, like in 1984, went Democrat.

Now in 1992 just the main part (not even the entire generational cohort) of the Boomer vote alone is 46% of the entire electorate, Marcus. 46% of the population in just one 14 year cohort consisting solely of boomers.

You might say, "Yeah, well, Clinton won." He did - with a Spoiler in the race.

But then there's the 1994 Off-Year election, Whites Aged 30-44 reported that 51% of them voted Republican in 1992. So while a good chunk of Boomers voted for Perot - about 20% - how many of them would have voted Clinton over Bush?

Back to the rest of the voting history.

90   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 1:21am  

Marcus, enjoy this. This is the only election in the past 30 years, when Boomers, along with every other age Cohort in America, chose the Democrat by a comfortable margin. They voted for Clinton right along with the evil old people.

Perot's still a spoiler, but he only got about 9% of the Boomer vote this time instead of 20%.

Just something to keep in mind - The "Comeback Kid", between 1994 and 1996, worked with the Republicans to balance the budget. It was done so, how? By Clinton moving to the Right, slashing education, of course the famous welfare limit "Workfare". Dick Morris? Triangulation? Robert Rubin? Bank Deregulation?

What else did Clinton do? Renew MFN with China in 1994.
http://tech.mit.edu/V114/N27/china.27w.html

Clinton was a Neoliberal, Economically Conservative, not a Progressive.

You'll also note that Boomers are about half the entire electorate now.

But I won't harp on this too much. Because in the next few elections will cinch my argument about Boomers leaning Republican as a group.

91   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 1:40am  

2000: Bush vs. Gore

The 30 - 49 cohort, mostly boomers with the first few years of Gen X - goes for Doubya

And the Oldest Fucks go for Al Gore by a comfortable margin.

The older boomers and silents go for Gore, but it's not broken down any further so we can't tell much from these exit polls.

2004: Bush vs. Kerry

Boomers vote for Bush again by a larger margin than they did in 2000.

Both age-ranges that encompass the boomers - and you can tell where most of them are by looking at the voter group size - go strongly for Bush. More strongly than in 2000. A little more than those evil old people did, actually.

The two Cohorts consisting only of Gen Xers go for Kerry - they're the only groups to do so.

Another reason the old fuck argument doesn't fly because the under 50s have almost 60% of the vote power.

92   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 1:52am  

2008: Obama vs. McCain

Obama barely squeaks by to a victory with the Boomers - by 1%

That's one whole percent - after the disastrous Bush years, when the exiting President was highly unpopular, from the events in his second term from Katrina to the beginning of the Great Recession. And of course, Sarah Palin. Also keep in mind McCain had serious trouble in the primaries, and made an ass of himself by kissing ultra-right ass, Liberty University, Pat Robertson, and abandoning all his stances on torture and the radical right. It think it also demotivated republican voters.

Among the younger age groups, including the no-longer-so-young Gen X'ers approaching middle age, Obama wins handsomely, by a comfortable margin of several points.

The Greatests and Silents are now only 16% of the electorate. Boomers alone are 37% of the electorate in this election - more than double the "Evil Old People".

NEXT: THE ELECTION THAT PROVES EVERYTHING

93   marcus   2014 Oct 18, 1:55am  

Okay, I've looked at some numbers in more detail, and see that I've been a little bit wrong on parts of this. A lot of my analysis was based on this graph.

marcus says

I now see based on this report,
http://www.census.gov/prod/2002pubs/p20-542.pdf

that I'm wrong. Even in the year 2000 when boomers (defined as born 1946 to 1964), voted a little more than those older than them.

I was thinking that they wouldn't over take the older voters until after that. Maybe more people die between say 60 and 75 than I was thinking.

So yeah, in 2000 there were about 44 million boomers that voted and about 38 million older folks that voted. Obviously those older voters have a lot of people in the Fox News crowd (these are very accurate numbers).

I never said the boomers aren't a huge number of people. I just said that generalizing about them as you do, and assigning blame to them as you do, makes no sense.

You could cite other groups, such as men, or white men, or Christians, or democrats, or capitalists, or tax payers, or working folks, or college educated, or women, or married, or parents....

These are all large groups, and they are all comprised of nearly half idiots who are apathetic about a lot of important issues. In many elections half or so don't even bother to vote.

So the boomers didn't save us from ourselves ? The boomers aren't enough different from other groups. Although they are more progressive than the group older than them. Turns out the boomers get manipulated and played just like everyone else.

If just doesn't make any sense. I haven't seen a shred of evidence indicating that the boomers are worse than other age groups. Yes, they are bigger than other age groups, especially if you limit the time intervals to be the same length. Notably, the boomers are especially bigger than younger groups. You and Dan seem to have retarded reasoning that goes something like this.

1) America is pretty messed up. Politically our priorities are skewed towards the interests of the rich and away from the interests of the people or the planet for that matter.

2) Boomers are a very significant chunk of the electorate, and yet they are a lot like everyone else in the country. Maybe a little wiser on average than those older than their group, but not enough to matter.

3) Hell, the game has become even more rigged during the period when they were a big chunk of the electorate, and the boomers didn't prevent that.

Therefore you blame them. It's their fault.

For the 10th time,...this is assinine.

94   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 2:02am  

2012. Obama vs. Gordon Gecko Mitt Romney.

No way those forward thinking, eternally young boomers were gonna vote for---

Oh Shit!

That's right folks, on the heels of the Great Recession, those Progressive Baby Boomers pulled for the Republican, the emptiest suit ever to run in US politics, by a solid margin.

Note also they are about 40% of the electorate - a huge chunk.

And you'll also notice that what saved Obama was the Xs and Ys, who went for Obama very strongly, and that was what won the election.

Now that the Y's are on board, we'll see more and more democrat victories as they are sizable enough to match and eventually outmatch, their conservative Boomer parents' voting.

95   marcus   2014 Oct 18, 2:24am  

Americans (and I guess humans in general) in their arrogance often seem to spend way to much time in life comparing ourselves to others.

I find this a pathetic human attribute, but I understand it.

After thinking about it, I get what the real issue is. And I don't mean that you feel inferior to boomers when you compare yourself. But you feel like we had it easier in some ways, better in some ways. And then in some twisted way, you blame us that things aren't the same for you.

I can tell you, that this is less true than you think, except with respect to housing (and that is mostly with the aid of hindsight). At least not if you have reasonable intelligence and skills (and experience)

I would say that times are more noticeably worse for low income and or low skills folks now than 30 years ago.

But the fact that you blame boomers for what you feel when you get all wrapped up in those ego based comparisons is sad.

So I do finally understand now. I've shifted from anger on this to sympathy. I would say empathy, but I don't know. I'd like to think I would do better job of framing your circumstances in a more honest and healthy way than you do (that is if I were in your shoes).

96   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 2:30am  

marcus says

that I'm wrong. Even in the year 2000 when boomers (defined as born 1946 to 1964), voted a little more than those older than them.

I was thinking that they wouldn't over take the older voters until after that. Maybe more people die between say 60 and 70 than I was thinking.

Marcus, only very recently did I believe this. Before if you asked me, I would have said the same as you. It wasn't until I saw all the current Millenial-Baby Boomer arguments did I begin to suspect that the conservative element in the boomers was higher than thought - or the media presents.

marcus says

I was thinking that they wouldn't over take the older voters until after that. Maybe more people die between say 60 and 70 than I was thinking.

Yep, A good reason not to raise Soc Sec age. And of course, just because somebody lives to 68, doesn't mean they won't break a hip at 70 and end up with only 2 years of retirement enjoyment that doesn't involve getting bed sores in a nursing home until they die.

97   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 2:36am  

marcus says

I never said the boomers aren't a huge number of people. I just said that generalizing about them as you do, and assigning blame to them as you do, makes no sense.

You could cite other groups, such as men, or white men, or Christians, or democrats, or capitalists, or tax payers, or working folks, or college educated, or women, or married, or parents....

These are all large groups, and they are all comprised of nearly half idiots who are apathetic about a lot of important issues. In many elections half or so don't even bother to vote.

First of all, I'm not looking at those groups, I'm looking at Age Cohorts.

If it's okay to ask how Millenials will vote, how Whites vote, how Blacks vote, how Women votes, etc. why can't we ask how Boomers vote and investigate that over time?

Who complains when somebody points out "Blacks go for the democrats in every election?"

If you look at Boomer voting record, you do not see a pattern of left, center-left, or even moderate tendency.

This is true NO MATTER how big or small they are, even though they are a huge chunk of the electorate - although now they are offset by Generation Y, which is why Democrats are starting to win again.

Another bullshit media claim is that GenX is "more conservative". Not based on their voting record, they ain't.

When the Boomers voted to the right, they generally did by strong margins. The few times they did vote left, there were either spoilers (Perot), or the margin was puny, around 2% more than not. A handful more for Obama than against in 2008.

Again, this is not blaming every individual because of the group they are a member of.

It is about overturning incorrect orthodoxy and a misleading narrative.

98   marcus   2014 Oct 18, 3:05am  

Yes, I have been all about overturning misleading narrative.

It's fine to take note of the voting record of an age cohort, where a few percentage points more republicans is significant in elections, and nearly half not even voting is significant in elections too.

But then to talk about blame or agency ? Why can't boomers own up to what ?

Yeah, I think I'll go back to fuck you. Fuck you.

99   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 18, 3:13am  

marcus says

Americans (and I guess humans in general) in their arrogance often seem to spend way to much time in life comparing ourselves to others.

I find this a pathetic human attribute, but I understand it.

After thinking about it, I get what the real issue is. And I don't mean that you feel inferior to boomers when you compare yourself. But you feel like we had it easier in some ways, better in some ways. And then in some twisted way, you blame us that things aren't the same for you.

I can tell you, that this is less true than you think, except with respect to housing (and that is mostly with the aid of hindsight). At least not if you have reasonable intelligence and skills (and experience)

I would say that times are more noticeably worse for low income and or low skills folks now than 30 years ago.

But the fact that you blame boomers for what you feel when you get all wrapped up in those ego based comparisons is sad.

Look, Marcus.

When demographers and historians write the legacy of the boomers, it won't be "Oh they were victims of conditions".

Your age group - not all of you, but the people in your age cohort generally - voted for Republicans and Neoliberals over and over again. What destroyed America wasn't "Competition" that "Nobody could control for". In the first half of the 20th Century, you think American goods didn't compete with German, French, and British products? They did, but thank fuck there was an average Tariff of around 30%.

Who cut the taxes on the 1%? Who "Freed us from the cold dead hand of government" and the Boomers brought him back a second time by big margins amongst themselves? Most Favored Nation trading status for Communist China? H1-Bs and outsourcing? Who got rid of those tariffs? Who really opened the floodgates and declared the first amnesty so that even poor Americans had a race to the bottom with wages and broke the unions, particularly in meat packing and other low-value added industries? Who fired all the ATCs? Who made a stink about Rock Music and Lyrics that poisoned kid's minds? Who joined all the evangelical churches over the past 40 years and turned the Religious Right into a powerful voting block, that in previous decades was a bunch of marginal snake handlers nobody cared about winning votes from? Who started demanding "Law and Order" and building the Prison Industrial Complex?

Why did democrats shift to the right, and the Progressive Wing lose all power? Why is it that most Democrats today are to the right of Liberal Republicans like Eisenhower on economic issues?

If Boomers repeatedly voted against - even by a small margin - the people who propose these things, but the old fucks swung the vote anyway, one could make the claim that they are innocent of responsibility for the current mess.

100   marcus   2014 Oct 18, 6:04am  

thunderlips11 says

If Boomers repeatedly voted against - even by a small margin - the people who propose these things, but the old fucks swung the vote anyway, one could make the claim that they are innocent of responsibility for the current mess.

If boomers who voted, making up roughly a third of the half or so of the people who voted, voted for these things by a small margin, it says absolutely NOTHING about boomers, other than that they were like everyone else:

1) Just like everyone else, they are susceptible to big money advertising
and the effect of big money in general in politics.

2) Just like every other age group, there are plenty of fundamental Christianists and others who are either highly gullible or below average intelligence or education level or all three.

3) Just like every other age group, they are especially vulnerable to propaganda about taxes and government spending and war and race, and "family values" and guns, just like so many people in other groupings are manipulated in politics.

But bottom line: if it's a total of 53% or something like that that ended up on the conservative (fuck you I've got mine) side of the spectrum, there is no generalization that particularly makes sense or is interesting about this age group. Were talking about a handful of people out of 100 being a reason to generalize about the 100**, when there are all kinds of factors influencing the people, 30% or more of whom are idiots.

(**and really we're talking about a handful of people out of 200 and generalizing about the 200 based on that, since half didn't vote. Sure that says something about the group too, but it's not different than any other group.)

If I had to guess, you majored in history or social sciences of some sort. You definitely aren't a science, math or logic person.

101   marcus   2014 Oct 19, 1:48am  

thunderlips11 says

one could make the claim that they are innocent of responsibility for the current mess.

One could make that claim anyway because the older group put leaders into power that gave us the circumstances causing slightly over 50% of the boomers to vote republican.

thunderlips11 says

Why did democrats shift to the right, and the Progressive Wing lose all power?

The biggest reasons I can think of:

1) The middle became more and more important politically (it always is), as claims that the left were soft on defense and that they were all about "tax and spend."

2)The lies about welfare (welfare queens), but also the justified perception that welfare was not totally good in the way that it impacts communities, and individuals. Welfare was and is necessary, but there were some negatives that come with it.

3) The "starve the beast" strategy of running up deficits (Reagan lowering taxes while increasing spending (esp military)) based on the machiavellian plan that this would preempt liberals from being able to bring home the bacon so to speak, and that the resulting high debt could be used to argue against "tax and spend" liberals.

4) The southern strategy, which was put into motion before the boomers were nearly as big a part of the electorate. But we see the aftermath today: Guns, gays and god.

5) The amazing but believed lie, that if lowering taxes, when taxes are above a certain level can cause tax revenues to increase, because of how stimulative it is to the economy, that therefore even when taxes are relatively low that this effect holds.

A lot of people are selfish enough about their taxes that they don't even want to think this through they just take it on faith. Combine this with #2 and #3 above and you have a powerful issue.

You say that Obama won because of Gen Y. That's partly true. But that's because of the pendulum finally swinging back (not enough), but it's also because democrats finally got on the lowering taxes message. Obama promised to lower taxes, and he did. But this was a little fucked up, because he had to wait a while to finally let the Bush tax cuts expire as intended (after they had finished redistributing the Social Security Tax surplus up to the rich) - further shackling the democrats from having any juice now that they had come to power.

102   Dan8267   2014 Oct 19, 7:32am  

The Professor says

Dan8267 says

sentient machines

Who, or what, created these machines?

Nature

103   Shaman   2014 Oct 19, 7:43am  

Dan8267 says

The Professor says

Dan8267 says

sentient machines

Who, or what, created these machines?

Nature

It's weird that nature was able to create nano machinery capable of self replication. Order from chaos, neogenesis, just like they believed in the dark ages!

104   NDrLoR   2014 Oct 19, 7:48am  

Dan8267 says

Who, or what, created these machines?

Nature

And who created nature?

God.

105   Dan8267   2014 Oct 19, 11:29am  

P N Dr Lo R says

Dan8267 says

Who, or what, created these machines?

Nature

And who created nature?

God.

And who created God?
Man.

106   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 20, 3:22am  

marcus says

1) Just like everyone else, they are susceptible to big money advertising

and the effect of big money in general in politics.

Big money and advertising has been with us for more than a century at least.

(Dan Smoot and HL Hunt are very interesting; most of their nonsense is repeated today - But it is more popular than ever before, esp. in the Tea Party contingent, which is most certainly not a Youth Movement by Composition. Needs a thread of it's own)

If anything, this argument would go better for X and Y, because they've lived in the era that epitomizes Soft Money, the end of the Fairness Doctrine, Think Tanks, Fox News, etc. Yet the voting record does not support this.

marcus says

2) Just like every other age group, there are plenty of fundamental Christianists and others who are either highly gullible or below average intelligence or education level or all three.

NOT like every other age group. The rise of Christian Right is a Boomer Story. Sure, there were snake handlers before, but the membership boomed with boomers in the late 60s to early 80s. The Jesus People/Jesus Freaks are the source of voting power (and donation money) for the Christian Right.

This deserves it's own thread sometime.

marcus says

3) Just like every other age group, they are especially vulnerable to propaganda about taxes and government spending and war and race, and "family values" and guns, just like so many people in other groupings are manipulated in politics.

This answer to this is in #1.

marcus says

But bottom line: if it's a total of 53% or something like that that ended up on the conservative (fuck you I've got mine) side of the spectrum, there is no generalization that particularly makes sense or is interesting about this age group. Were talking about a handful of people out of 100 being a reason to generalize about the 100**, when there are all kinds of factors influencing the people, 30% or more of whom are idiots.

marcus says

(**and really we're talking about a handful of people out of 200 and generalizing about the 200 based on that, since half didn't vote. Sure that says something about the group too, but it's not different than any other group.)

It's absolute nonsense to dismiss exit polls on those grounds. As somebody who is a teacher - a math teacher - you should certainly understand that generally speaking, the larger the sample size less the margin of error. You'll see that the source features an average sample number much higher than 100-200 people.

Since personal characteristics including race, gender, age, income, etc. aren't collected from the voter while they are in the booth, this is the only reliable proxy we have. I'll repeat that they are primary tool used to adjudicate the fairness of elections, and I believe that if professionally run exit polls off by more than a small degree, it's a sure sign of voting fraud.

National exit polls consist of presidential and/or congressional vote questions in addition to questions on gubernatorial races, important issues affecting the vote decision, presidential approval and a number of current national issues. With the exception of the 1972 CBS News Exit Poll, all include basic demographic variables such as gender, race, education, income, and age, among others. Sample sizes for these studies usually range from 8,000 to 20,000 voters, with the largest samples coming from the 1986 and 1988 ABC News Exit Polls which consist of over 50,000 interviews.

Please email Data Services at DataServices-RoperCenter@uconn.edu for information concerning fees, other studies, or to answer any questions you may have.


http://www.ropercenter.uconn.edu/elections/common/exitpolls.html

By all means write the University if you have questions or doubts about their methodology.

More later.

107   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 20, 4:21am  

marcus says

The biggest reasons I can think of:

I agree, but I should be more clear with what I'm trying to pose:

Why has the politics shifted so that Progressive positions are untenable? Why have the democrats believed they have to shift so far to the right?

I think, to convince people, propaganda has to appeal to concepts already held by target of the propaganda, and demonstrate how those held beliefs mean the target should embrace the POV of the propagandist.

108   marcus   2014 Oct 20, 3:29pm  

thunderlips11 says

It's absolute nonsense to dismiss exit polls on those grounds. As somebody who is a teacher - a math teacher - you should certainly understand that generally speaking, the larger the sample size less the margin of error. You'll see that the source features an average sample number much higher than 100-200 people.

Why craft a response to some imaginary straw man bs ?

Did you miss it WAY earlier when I pretty much conceded the numbers ?

How can you so totally misinterpret what I said. You're nonsense about me being a teacher etc., I guess I struck a nerve about you being a history major ?

Let me try again.

Accepting that in the Reagan election, the boomers between 16 and 21 didn't vote, and the ones between 21 and 30 slightly favored carter, and the ones between 31 and 34 favored Reagan.

Also TOTALLY accepting that in later elections anywhere from 50 to 54 percent of boomers voted for republicans (given all the propaganda, and self interest reasons I mentioned)

This still means that you are talking about making generalizations about
each 100 boomer voters (and the other 100 that didnt vote), based on what a few people did. If 4 of those 100 voters voted the other way, you would not be making this generalization.

So, yes, I basically just repeated what I said before. IT's doubtful that you are going to get it. I am not challenging the exit polls, although I did at one point (a little - 1988 an extremely low turn out election, but evidently the bible belt came out in full force.

But I'm not talking about that

Those 4 people out of 100 (really out of 200) are only statistically significant relative to an election, the outcome of which is determined by majority of the people that actually vote.

IT's not an indictment of the entire group, and it's not information upon which an interesting generalization cane be made, nor does it make sense to talk about blaming boomers collectively.

It's disappointing, but not surprising at all, given all the reasons I've already spent too much time spelling out, probably the biggest being that at least 25% are really stupid. That and all the conniving republicans have been doing the last 50 years.

25% or more of the boomers are idiots, but you aren't going to generalize about boomers being idiots (which makes sense) because it's the same for all the other groups.

But oh no, 3 percent more are republicans than democrats, even with the Christian right etc, they get it up to just a few percent more than democrats in some big elections, and you you say boomers as a group need to own up to that.

You're fucking retarded.

thunderlips11 says

Why has the politics shifted so that Progressive positions are untenable? Why have the democrats believed they have to shift so far to the right?

I've repeated myself enough. I answered this already. Politics is a battle for the minds of the voters, especially the minds of the less intelligent folks. But a lot of this appeals to normal family types, hard working folks trying to live decently in times of slowly decreasing standard of living.

marcus says

1) The middle became more and more important politically (it always is), as claims that the left were soft on defense and that they were all about "tax and spend."

2)The lies about welfare (welfare queens), but also the justified perception that welfare was not totally good in the way that it impacts communities, and individuals. Welfare was and is necessary, but there were some negatives that come with it.

3) The "starve the beast" strategy of running up deficits (Reagan lowering taxes while increasing spending (esp military)) based on the machiavellian plan that this would preempt liberals from being able to bring home the bacon so to speak, and that the resulting high debt could be used to argue against "tax and spend" liberals.

4) The southern strategy, which was put into motion before the boomers were nearly as big a part of the electorate. But we see the aftermath today: Guns, gays and god.

5) The amazing but believed lie, that if lowering taxes, when taxes are above a certain level can cause tax revenues to increase, because of how stimulative it is to the economy, that therefore even when taxes are relatively low that this effect holds.

A lot of people are selfish enough about their taxes that they don't even want to think this through they just take it on faith. Combine this with #2 and #3 above and you have a powerful issue.

109   smaulgld   2014 Oct 20, 4:15pm  

marcus says

Roger Ailles, Rupert Murdoch, Newt Gingrich, and all the founding members of the Heritage Foundation were born before the baby boom, as were countless other lapdogs of the people who pull the strings of the American right wing. The Koch brother were born in 1935 and 1940.

Bad people in all generations
Mistake to blame generations not individuals
Like blaming all americans for bush or obama
Or all people of a certain racial group for crime

110   MisdemeanorRebel   2014 Oct 20, 4:19pm  

marcus says

IT's not an indictment of the entire group, and it's not information upon which an interesting generalization cane be made, nor does it make sense to talk about blaming boomers collectively.

Not this strawman again. The debate is whether boomers share responsibility for where we are.

marcus says

This still means that you are talking about making generalizations about

each 100 boomer voters (and the other 100 that didnt vote), based on what a few people did. If 4 of those 100 voters voted the other way, you would not be making this generalization.

The thing is, there is no evidence offered. You're assuming that the non-voters would have voted against Reagan or Bush the First. If the margin of victory among boomers was much narrower, I'd be more inclined to believe that was a possibility.

Assuming your assumptions are correct, then it doesn't absolve responsibility for the outcome, because not voting changed the outcome.

marcus says

But oh no, 3 percent more are republicans than democrats, even with the Christian right etc, they get it up to just a few percent more than democrats in some big elections, and you you say boomers as a group need to own up to that.

A few big elections? There was a damned big election recently with an extremely high turnout. Bush-Gore 2000.

This actually doesn't help your case, because you've been arguing there is a large non-voting contingent of boomers that leans left. High turnout elections have traditionally favored the democrats in the past century.

What was the result of that election?

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