By Bill Maher
When we talk about the conservative bubble, we’re generally talking
about the Fox-Rush-Drudge information bubble, and the people who reside
in it. This is the information loop that allows any willing right-winger
to live in a world where the opinions they already are the only ones
that get recited back to them, and the opinions they will one day have
get fed to them so they can later recite them and hear them being
recited back again, and around and around we go, all without any having
to hear any opposing viewpoints expressed beyond – possibly – those of
tokens like Kirsten Powers and that old school Irish Dem who
periodically loses it and tells Sean Hannity to go fuck himself. I think
his name is Bob Beckel or something. And I’d like his job some day.
If you’re a conservative, wherever you turn, the bubble is there. If
you want to get your news on TV, you have Fox. If you’re the type who
frequents talk radio, there’s Rush, along with a dozen other Rush
clones. If you want to get your news online, you get all the links you
want to read assembled for you by Matt Drudge, complete with misleading
headlines, bad pictures of Hillary Clinton and Michele Obama, and a
smattering of racism. Anywhere a Republican wants to turn for news,
there’s a friendly face. And by “friendly” I mean the “smiling veneer
over the contemptible inner core.”
But there was always one hole in the bubble that continued to let in
the air of reality: polling information. As in, surveys that measure
what Americans actually believe, or who they plan on voting for, or what
they think of ideas like privatizing Social Security, etc. Because
wingnuts can go for months and not talk to anyone who doesn’t think
Obama is a bigger threat to America than Al Qaeda with airborne AIDS,
but that’s because they live in rural Tennessee, and inside the
information bubble.
Polling information, on the other hand, when done correctly, comes
from a representative sample of everyone. What’s more, polls are often
widely reported, mostly because it’s an easy article to write. Even if
you do your best to live only in the Fox-Rush-Drudge information world,
you’re still going to get information about what people outside the
bubble think through polling data. And it can be very disconcerting for
Republicans, finding out that millions of other Americans exist in the
“not real America” and think they’re completely batshit.
Thankfully, Republicans now seem to have solved this problem. Enter
Scott Rasmussen. He’s a Republican and a pollster. And a few years ago,
it seemed Scott ran his polling outfit the way everyone else did. But
somewhere along the line – and I’m guessing here – Scott saw which way
the media winds were blowing and realized there was a new way to
distinguish yourself in the world of political news: by taking a side.
You see, polls, when done accurately, have a way of creating a
narrative about what people actually want or think, or what may
eventually happen. And this narrative is largely immune from the
partisans on either side because, well, it just is. Because
polls are the temperature of reality. If your candidate is down 8 points
in a poll a few weeks out before the election, the story starts
becoming about how you’re going to lose, and how everyone knows it, and
how you might as well stay home on election day because it’s hopeless.
Which is effective, or harmful, depending on which side you’re on.
Because lots of people are looking for an excuse not to vote anyway and
“My Candidate is down 9 points as of yesterday” is a pretty good one.
These narratives are particularly dangerous for Republicans. And
that’s where Rasmussen polling comes in. By designing his to polls to
lean Republican, he allows Republicans inside the bubble to continue
breathing the air inside the bubble. Ex: When other polls show Obama
pulling away from Romney, release a poll that says he isn’t:
Mission accomplished.
You see, now when people inside the bubble get confronted with what
people think outside they bubble you can say, “No, according to a poll
out today, they don’t think that!” Narrative averted! Thanks, Scott
Rasmussen!
There’s only one problem with this, of course. And that’s that the
bubble has now plugged its leak. Remaining contact with the outside
world is even more limited. Republicans now not only have their own
information loop, but their own polling company to deny what everyone
outside the bubble thinks, too.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Rasmussen Closes the Hole
Labels:
2012 Election,
bill maher,
HBO Real Time,
Matt Drudge,
Mitt Romney,
Paul Ryan,
polls,
Rasmussen,
Republicans
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2 comments:
I was one of the first million to donate to Obama in 2007 and, despite being rather disenchanted, I plan to vote for him again in a couple of months. I am a huge fan of Real Time as well.
That being said, based upon your editorial at the end of your show on 10/5, Mr. Maher, I am beginning to believe you may be slightly guilty of living in your own bubble. You made light of the struggles currently being faced by the middle class ... acting as though we've recovered because our shopping malls are full and traffic is bad.
During the past five years my household has destroyed our savings. My husband and I have been out of work off and on and have had to draw down our retirement and savings to keep a roof over our heads. My two oldest sons graduated college during this period and have been unable to get "real" jobs. We have had to assist them.
During the last two years we have been going in the right direction, however, it doesn't change the fact that the Middle Class of this country was completely decimated in the last decade.
Making light of the struggles we have been through is not going to get our votes. The President needs to feel our pain and offer us a light at the end of the tunnel ... He needs to shine a light on his accomplishments of the past four years and shine a very bright light on where we're going. He needs to bring the "HOPE" back to his campaign.
Agree on many points - I too am a BIG fan of Bill and Barack. And agree on your vote and recommended next steps for Pres. Barack.
Humorists need to support one another, and I'd love to see a Bill and Jon interview. How about it?!
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