Admin wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 4:31 pm
Meadmaker wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 12:30 am
It is my belief that if she had stood up a few months ago and said
"Males shouldn't be allowed to play in girls' sports." And
"Abortion should be illegal in the third trimester except in cases where it is necessary to save the mother's life," and
"My administration will not support any payments to individuals for reparations related to their ancestors' slavery."
If she had said those things, I believe the election would be over. Trump would have no chance. She didn't. As a result, Donald Trump may very well return to the White House.
Nope. Utter baloney.
The voters to whom those are real issues are already voting Trump.
Unfortunately, there's no good way to determine an answer. If we had money, we might be able to do focus groups or some such that might give us a hint, but we don't, so we're left with speculation and hunches.
What I, and Bill Maher, think is that you're wrong about the effect on elections.
The way I see American elections these days is that there are some people who vote Republican no matter what. There are some people who vote Democratic no matter what. Those votes are unreachable. This year, there is a third block, which is the hard core "never Trump" voters. There are folks like Liz Cheney who will vote for Kamala Harris despite being more closely ideologically aligned with Trump, but they'll vote against him because of his personality flaws and/or dictatorial tendencies. That's a much smaller block, but those votes are also unreachable.
However, if you add up all of those unreachable votes, they don't add up to 50% of the electorate on either side. There's still an undecided middle which will determine the outcome of the election.
So what do you think will make the difference for those people? You've heard what Bill Maher and I think about it, but if we're wrong, what is actually the sticking point that prevents them from picking one side or the other?