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Archive for May 6th, 2007

Of the People

Posted by Adam Graham on May 6, 2007

The media and parties are confused about their role in the presidential election process. Their job, in principle is to present to us our choices, provide context to candidate positions and then let voters make the decision. Instead, candidates are being pre-screened and spoon-fed to us by the press and the parties.

Thus, while John Cox has worked vigorously to establish state organizations and recently won the County Republican Straw poll in Aiken, South Carolina, he found himself locked out of MSNBC’s Republican Debate. Worse than that, while doing an interview in the parking lot, Reagan Library security staff broke up the interview and seized Cox’s green room pass insuring he would not be able to do the six interviews he’d scheduled after the debate.

Having been a supporter of Dr. Alan Keyes in his two Presidential bids, I’ve experienced the attempts to limit the peoples’ choices. However, the decision of select TV stations to lock Dr. Keyes out of debates came after primary elections.

The spurious efforts of the South Carolina Republican Party and Fox News to limit people’s choices beats all. The Chairman of the South Carolina GOP required a 1% showing in state and national polls to make it to the debate.

There are several problems that one runs into with such a standard:

First, it misses the point of such early debates. At this point in the process, name recognition decides polls. The point of debates for lesser know candidates is to give them a chance to be seen by the voters. Candidates have no chance of rising in the polls if they’re not seen. They can’t get seen unless they rise in the polls. Get it? While one could argue for using polls in January, using them in May is unfair.

Second, the 1% “threshold” shows a poor understanding of how polls work. At the bottom of any poll you’ll see a margin of error. That margin is generally somewhere between +/- 3% and +/- 4.5%. Thus a Candidate who has 1% in a poll could really have 4%, or they could have 0.1% of the vote and been lucky enough to have their supporters vastly over-sampled. Similarly a candidate who shows at 0.2% could have 3.2% of the vote. Polls are not fine measuring instruments. A 1% difference is statistically meaningless The Chairman of the South Carolina GOP is trying to measure inches with the help of mile markers.

Third, the polls themselves are flawed. One poll which was used as a basis for South Carolina State polling failed to mention Mr. Cox as a candidate, which would make it hard for most 2nd tier candidates to achieve “the minimum standards.”

Fourth, the decision limits the choices of the American people. While many might scoff that Mr. Cox is unable to win, that’s not the decision of the media and party bosses to make. In addition, there are many candidates on that stage who can be safely called long shots. One doesn’t have to be a prophet to know that at least three of those ten candidates (and probably five) will be out of the race immediately following the Iowa Strawpoll this Summer.

Republicans have hardly made up their mind and when you talk with the your average Republican, there’s dissatisfaction with the choices being offered. This led more than one commentator to declare the winner of the debate to be Fmr. Senator Fred Thompson (R-TN.) who was both absent from the debate and not an announced candidate.

John Cox is an announced candidate. I believe that when Americans see Mr. Cox in a debate, they’ll see his sincerity and the depths of his conviction, and they’ll rally to his cause. I could be wrong, but I should find out for myself and the American people should be able to decide the issue.

I urge you, whether you support Mr. Cox or not, to contact the South Carolina Republican Party and urge his inclusion in the debate. While I don’t agree with former US Senator Mike Gravel (D-Ak.) or think he’d be a good president, I spoke up for his inclusion in the Democratic Debates. Only when all Americans make it clear that we don’t the want media or party bosses screening out committed Presidential candidate will the media and the political establishment stop playing this game. The South Carolina GOP can be reached at (803)988-8440.

Posted in Presidential Race 2008 | 2 Comments »

Weekend Conservative Podcast:

Posted by Adam Graham on May 6, 2007

Tonight on the Truth and Hope Report:

-Presidential Debate Follies
-Fred Thompson’s Debut
-Are We Too Stupid to Tell an Actor From His Role
-What You Get With Democrat Governors
-Rick Warren’s Church Discipline Problem

Click here to download. Click here to add my podcast to your I-tunes.




Related:

US News and World Report:

Ford Spirit at First Debate

Red State:

You Get What You Vote For (And You Pay For It Too)

The Right Angle:

Fred Thompson Played a Racist Once — Oh My!

Christian News Wire:

Rick Warren: Purpose Driven Pornography

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Posted in Abortion | Leave a Comment »

Lesson 11: Video Blogging

Posted by Adam Graham on May 6, 2007

Video blogging is the final frontier of blogging. It is perhaps the least advanced form of blogging in terms of user-created content, but it still merits some discussion.

1) The advantages and disadvantages of Videoblogging:

Impact: If a picture is worth a thousand words, a good video is worth ten thousand. The things we see on video seem more real to us.

Price and practicality: It’s becoming less expensive to purchase a camera, equipment, etc. YouTube and other services makes it more practical to host your film.

Negatives:

1) Results

It’s really a hard medium to work in. Audio is the easiest, text and picture posts require formatting and editting, but video is something else. Issues arise like:

-Lighting
-Sound quality
-Steadiness
-Hair and Ties

2) Persuasiveness-Whoever changed their mind because they saw it on YouTube.

3) Reach: Compared to other mediums, Video fails to reach as many people usually

To do video on your blog:

1) Have a camera

2) Edit Your Video

Bonus Tip: Always edit still pictures

3)Have a purpose for using video.

Obviously, if you’re video-minded go to town, but for the rest of us, Video-blogging may not be the easiest.

Trends to watch for in Video-Blogging:

Some clues that Video-blogging may be getting more worthwhile:

1) Better quality cameras available for less
2) Better video quality on computers

3) Monetization
4) Popular Regular non-professional Video Blogcasts

Click here to download the podcast.



Posted in Conservative Blogging 101 | Leave a Comment »