HillbillyDan
Member
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2007
- Messages
- 177
If there are "technical glitches" then the bastards must be held accountable! If we have to go back to paper and pencils to get a proper vote then so be it!
Sadly, 9 out of 10 Ron Paul supporters that I know (well, roughly anyways) have donated.
RP supporters are vocal and pro-active.
Lew has great logic, but I'm not sure how applicable it is. WE NEED TO VOTE, PERIOD.
Sadly, 9 out of 10 Ron Paul supporters that I know (well, roughly anyways) have donated.
RP supporters are vocal and pro-active.
Lew has great logic, but I'm not sure how applicable it is. WE NEED TO VOTE, PERIOD.
I hope you are wrong.Sadly, 9 out of 10 Ron Paul supporters that I know (well, roughly anyways) have donated.
RP supporters are vocal and pro-active.
Lew has great logic, but I'm not sure how applicable it is. WE NEED TO VOTE, PERIOD.
I disagree, there are tons of Ron Paul supporters who can't or don't donate. My whole family is a good example. I am the only one who has donated, but they all like him and will vote.
WARNING- ANECDOTAL EVIDENCE BELOW
I know about 15 people who will be voting Paul in the Illinois primaries.
NONE of them go to meetup groups, visit this forum, or have participated in any moneybombs. I'm the only out of that 15 who has donated (never done rallys/meetups)
This tells me that the grasssroots that people are seeing (signs on the street/moneybombs) are just the TIP OF THE ICEBERG.
My honest opinion is that Ron Paul's voter/donor is 18-1, or somewhere close to that.
That entire analysis is meaningless because we have no idea what RP's voter:donor ratio might be, therefore we have no clue about how many votes he will get.
Furthermore, using the Kucinich ratio generates the most optimistic result. That defeats the purpose of this style of analysis, which is to see what the result is from using the worst case number.
The author of this Lew Rockwell article didn't take into account that Democratic (Kucinich) caucuses are different than Republican caucuses in Iowa.
Iowa caucuses are run not by the government, but rather by the state Democratic and Republican Parties.
While the Republican caucuses are fairly simple - voters can leave shortly after they declare their preferences - Democratic caucuses can require more time and multiple candidate preferences from participants. They do not conform to the one-person, one-vote rule, because votes are weighted according to a precinct's past level of participation. Ties can be settled by coin toss or picking names out of a hat.
Can anyone review if and how this issue affects the donor:voter ratios ? Its seems the ratios for Dems would be much lower than Republicans due to fewer "precinct votes" (dems) than individual (Rep) votes.
EVERYONE READ THE ABOVE POST. It has a very important incite.
Earlier I thought of this and was thinking it would negatively impact our Nicks calculations but after doing a little thinking it actually works in our favor since Nick is using Dennis as his control.
This means that the numbers Nick is using are Dennis supporters who actually had their vote count, aka they were in a Precinct where Dennis reached 15% (very very few). This completely throws off the calculation, but in a prudent manner (underestimated rather than over)
A more accurate measure would be to take Dean's voter to donor ratio and use that. Divide by however many times you think Ron Paul supporters were more likely to donate than dean supporters and there you go.
Someone find how many unique donors Dean had and how many votes he received.
That entire analysis is meaningless because we have no idea what RP's voter:donor ratio might be, therefore we have no clue about how many votes he will get.
Furthermore, using the Kucinich ratio generates the most optimistic result. That defeats the purpose of this style of analysis, which is to see what the result is from using the worst case number.
Woah, woah, woah. Hold up. You just reversed your math. By saying Kucinich had the worst voter:donor ratio, they mean he had the least number of voters for each donor i.e. other candidates had like 50:1 or something like that (probably actually a lot more). This was using the worst case scenario from the 2004 numbers. RP's support may be fervent enough that he even gets lower than that, but I think it's reasonable to say at least 18:1, which would be 21.6% if they get 100,000 votes. He's taking 3rd at the very least.
Being a college student, I know many RP supporters that cannot afford to donate. The campaign claims that there are many young followers, which would mean that many do not have adequate funds to donate. Additionally, has there ever been a candidate that has had more donors that have maxed out than RP? I find maxed-out donors everywhere, which would mean that there aren't as many supporters donating, but rather small amounts of supporters donating LARGE, LARGE amounts. RP supporters are known for their energy, but instead of donating, some sign-wave, create videos, etc.....
There WILL be "technical glitches" tommorrow which will leave Ron Paul off the ballot in some precincts etc..guaranteed that the fix is somewhat in....as much as they could anyway.