Political parties matters. Polls can no longer predict how a
candidate will vote by what he or she says on the campaign trail as they once
did. In the “old days”, politicians were beholden to the voters in their districts.
This populism was so because they depended on donations to finance their campaigns.
Historically, there were no rules saying this but politicians were people who
could most afford to campaign. They could ride horse back from town to town,
which meant they could not be working; therefore, they had to depend on their
personal fortune or the generosity of supporters to survive. Although most of
us never think along these lines, this resulted in a narrowly focused group of
people who could be political candidates; generally, they were not in the
working class. They were the rich or were in the professions; lawyers seem to
lead the pack with generals following closely.
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Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Jackson are classic example of “anyone
can be president”, but this is true only if we overlook the fact that they were
exceptions; Lincoln became a lawyer when most lawyers were rich. Jackson was a general
before becoming a farmer, but nonetheless, he was a rich farmer. In addition to
candidate background, many other things influence party membership. Scientists
seem to think that about 33% of a person’s political affiliation is associated
with his or her genes that is, “political beliefs are innate”. I believe that
nurturing plays a big part. Scientists partition the nurturing and nature affiliations
by studying siblings and twins; thus, bury the positive nurturing affect of genetic
“like” parents. This suggests to me that genetics pays a bigger part then scientists
generally think, a belief I advance on this blog site.
In addition, to this there is the fact that many people vote
in an illogical way. In a sense, they vote their innate feeling or their genes,
which may be a vote against their own best interest. If people do something
without explanation, in my opinion, one of the first places to look is the
genome. Let me give an example:
Pollsters ask people if they support affordable health care.
Well over 50% of the people support that program, a remarkable figure in the
face of the massive hate “Obamacare” rhetoric. It is a standard response to
deplore old age poverty and support Social Security. There is some anti social
security program rhetoric but it is not as massive as in the current health
care question. It harkens, back to residual hate for FDR’s social upheaval of
the early 1930’s, the so-called “New Deal”. In addition, there are many other
government programs with overwhelming public support, including such diverse things
as food stamps and the Pentagon. Now
move to the budget. Polls show everyone wants a balanced budget, not by a slim
margin but tremendously. The public overwhelmingly agree that “we the people”
need to pay for what they buy. We collectively hate defect spending but we all
do it; house mortgage, car loans, layaway programs. In other words, we
understand finance.
Thus, poll results make it abundantly clear; we want the
government to provide all these good things and we know we have to pay for them.
It makes no sense to me that people cannot put these two things together. Frank
Lutz has repeatedly shown this dichotomy of reason in focus groups, small
groups of people who express opinion. The magic of focus groups is that the
experimenter can select the political affiliation of the members in any one
group. This is the exact opposite of polling; for example those poll results
just referenced; most polltakers try to be honest and try to reach a cross-section
of voter, which gives value to what they do. Focus group results are the exact opposite
from polling results. When asked, regardless of political affiliation, people
in focus groups overwhelmingly object to paying taxes, duties, fines, etc,
which are answers in stark contrast to polling results in the sense that people
want all the good things that government does for them but do not want to pay
for them. This disconnect is covered up
by innumerable schemes but the fact remains, we cannot have all the nice things
we overwhelmingly want if we do not pay for them.
If we understand finance, how can it be that we do not want
a debt yet do not want to pay taxes? The political fury around election time
centers on this point with one huge caveat; Democrats want all these things and
so do Republicans but neither Democrat nor Republican wants to pay for them. Listen
during the campaign and you will hear political pendants say this in a hundred different
ways; Democrats belong to a “tax and spend” party, Republicans claim to belong to
a fiscally responsible party. It makes no sense that politicians deny the
things they believe in. How can anyone, by any stretch of the imagination,
living in a democracy, deny this? Nevertheless, as the poll results indicate, people vote for Republican candidates because
they want all of these social programs and tell the people that they can have
them without paying taxes. This is incredible but clearly falls in within the
pattern predicted by Frank Lutz.
Apparently and in direct conflict with Republican campaign
rhetoric, it seems that people in general think they can have expensive social
programs without paying for them but so do people who know that is not
reasonable; they say one thing and vote something else. Why? It makes no sense.
Their votes prove this beyond reasonable doubt. What it also proves is that
they vote the way they do because they want to hang on to their money—they earned it so they want to keep it.
As the polls show, selfishness is innate in the great majority of all of us. It
is the three billion year old “red in tooth and claw survival”; clearly, bestial
survival of the fittest means survival of the ones that have the most. Call it
willful ignorance if you want. As a Democrat, I believe that is carrying
conservatism too far; I feel our humanization has moved us beyond that, at
least some of us.
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