On 12/13/2010 04:25 PM, Michael Madigan wrote:
> Talking out your ass again.  60% support repeal of the Obamacare bill.
>
> http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current_events/healthcare/health_care_law
>
>
>

Rasmussen Reports is a conservative-leaning polling group that is about 
as biased as Fox. Scott Rasmussen was a paid consultant for the 2004 
George W. Bush campaign, which tells me everything I need to know about 
Scott Rasmussen. LOL

#--------------------------------


Criticism

TIME has described Rasmussen Reports as a "conservative-leaning polling 
group".[21] The Center For Public Integrity has pointed out that Scott 
Rasmussen was a paid consultant for the 2004 George W. Bush 
campaign.[22] According to Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight.com, while 
there are no apparent records of Scott Rasmussen or Rasmussen Reports 
making contributions to political candidates in recent years and its 
public election polls are generally regarded as reliable, "some 
observers have questioned its issue-based polling, which frequently 
tends to elicit responses that are more conservative than those found on 
other national surveys."[23]

Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo commented on their reliability in a 
February 2009 article:[24][25]

The toplines tend to be a bit toward the Republican side of the 
spectrum, compared to the average of other polls. But if you factor that 
in they're pretty reliable. And the frequency that Rasmussen is able to 
turn them around – because they're based on robocalls – gives them added 
value in terms of teasing out trends. But the qualitative questions, in 
terms of their phrasing and so forth, are frequently skewed to give 
answers friendly toward GOP or conservative viewpoints. All of which is 
to say that his numbers are valuable. But they need to be read with that 
bias in mind.

Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com observed that at the end of the 2010 
general election cycle, Rasmussen Polls consistently were biased against 
Democrats by 3 to 4 points. [26]

I did a quick check on the accuracy of polls from the firm Rasmussen 
Reports, which came under heavy criticism this year — including from 
FiveThirtyEight — because its polls showed a strong lean toward 
Republican candidates. Indeed, Rasmussen polls quite consistently turned 
out to overstate the standing of Republicans tonight. Of the roughly 100 
polls released by Rasmussen or its subsidiary Pulse Opinion Research in 
the final 21 days of the campaign, roughly 70 to 75 percent 
overestimated the performance of Republican candidates, and on average 
they were biased against Democrats by 3 to 4 points. ....it appears as 
though the worst poll of the political cycle will be the Rasmussen 
Reports survey of Hawaii, which had the incumbent Daniel Inoyue 
defeating Cam Cavasso by just 13 points. Mr. Inouye is ahead by 55 
points right now. If Mr. Inouye’s margin holds, the 42-point error would 
be by far the worst general election poll in FiveThirtyEight’s database, 
which includes all polls since 1998; the previous record was 29 points.

Rasmussen has received criticism over the wording in its 
polls.[27][unreliable source?] Examples of Rasmussen's questions with 
wording issues include:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rasmussen_Reports

#-----------------------------------

Regards,

LelandJ






>
>
> --- On Mon, 12/13/10, Ed Leafe<[email protected]>  wrote:
>
>> From: Ed Leafe<[email protected]>
>> Subject: Re: [OT] Federal Judge finds Obamacare UNCONSTITUTIONAL!
>> To: "ProFox Email List"<[email protected]>
>> Date: Monday, December 13, 2010, 5:19 PM
>> On Dec 13, 2010, at 5:12 PM, geoff
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Excuse me, but you aren't going to somehow tell me
>> that this healthcare bill
>>> has met with acceptance are you? Yes, this judge's
>> ruling is worthless, but
>>> the debate it has engendered - yet again - is not.
>> Frankly, it is time for a
>>> fe of you to stand up and be counted!
>>
>>      We did. Back in 2008, Obama said that he
>> wanted to pass health care reform, and McCain said he
>> opposed it. Health care was one of the main reasons people
>> voted for Obama; they wanted that "change" that he was
>> promising.
>>
>>      There is no "debate"; it is the usual
>> minority of voices who like to shout the loudest to keep up
>> the appearance that most people oppose this law.
>>
>>
>>
>> -- Ed Leafe
>>
>>
>>
>>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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