Say black and white all you want but...Darth Wong wrote:They only felt that they polled aggressive Democrats too much, not that their work was suddenly nonsensical. You are engaging in a black/white fallacy. Their numbers could be off by a factor of two (a huge error) and the point would still remain that the issue was easily enough to turn the election.Augustus wrote:Nope. Just pointing out that if the actuall pollsters have no-faith in the results of their work, then we shouldn't be obliged to either. The fact that there was a pro-democratic bais to the exit polls just makes the results more non-sensical.Oh puh-lease, you're just looking for excuses. You know as well as I do that the people who cited "moral values" were talking about Biblical ones, particularly the looming gay-marriage issue. And trying to completely dismiss the exit polls based on the fact that they might not be as accurate as hoped is absurd; they could be off by a factor of 200% and the point would still remain.See thats the problem. The exit poll does not list "Gay Marriage" on it. We are jumping to the conclusion (not without justification) that the result for "moral values" means "Gay marriage". Thats a shakey limb comsidering the exit polls were flawed to begin with.
Did they skew their sample - yes.
Did they over generalize the issues people where voting for - yes.
Did the exit poll results conflict with the election results - yes.
The pollster is engaging in CYA on PBS - bottom line the exit polls were flawed. Before I jumped to a conclusion about the motives of those that were voting I would want an 'accurate' sample.