|
...but these exit polls, unless appropriately weighted, have favored the Dems in several previous elections including Dukakis vs. Bush in 1988. Someone posted a thread with links to an article about this a while back, but there are so many of 'em I don't know where it is at the moment.
If the early data was unweighted it does not prove fraud. All these polls have to be adjusted and ultimately conform to the election results themselves. I'm sorry to say that they are really just another form of ratings, like those used to sell soap ads on TV.
That said, sure the dillweed should come forward and release his raw data. And Diebold should release their source code too! Let's face it, they're all in business for one reason -- to make money -- not to ensure the accuracy of the vote per se.
What WE need to do is to place the onus on the states to prove that all our votes counted as cast. This means litigation, citing the proprietary nature of the machine code, lack of security to protect the data, the need for the voter-verifiable paper trail, etc.
Another poster in another thread has also suggested that the way to prove fraud is to recount ALL the votes in Ohio, or any damn county or precincts we choose as citizens. While I can't say this is a bad idea, if Ohio does indeed have a voter-verified paper trail on their DREs (and I'm still not sure that they do), it is expensive because you have to pay the local election workers to actually count the ballots while you observe. The main difference between this and the Glibs' effort, is that this one can happen even after Shrub has been reinstalled, while theirs has to go by Ohio recount law and to make any difference, has to be completed ASAP, without major errors, hacking, etc. and unfortunately, without hand counting as much as 97% of the votes.
Bottom line: proving fraud is "hard work" but as another well-known Republican once said, "Trust but verify."
|