I was going to post about the Indian rice feeding ceremony my parents and I went to for the daughter of one of Dad's colleagues, but I'm going to save it for later for a number of different reasons. 1) The Professor made some comments in the Captial Gains Tax post, and I said I'd post the forward I got about the ignorance of U.S. voters regarding the elections. 2) I had a 10 hour rehearsal today for the play that I'm in, and I'm beat (I'll post about that later too). 3) NaNoWriMo starts today, and I'd rather write on that for right now. 4) With the upcoming election only 2 days away, I figured it would be more pertinent to post this now since I can post about the rice ceremomy later. 5) The camera batteries are dead, and I can't get the pictures of the ceremony until after I recharge them.
So, here's the forward I got! Reprinted verbatim: It Speaks for Itself. Special thanks to anderella for sending it to me!
GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS, UNBELIEVABLE NEWS
by James W. Harris
New Study: Shocking Voter Ignorance
A new study by the libertarian Cato Institute indicates that a shockingly large number of U.S. voters are almost totally ignorant about the issues and candidates they vote on.
"Overall, close to one-third of Americans can be categorized as 'know-nothings' almost completely ignorant of relevant political information," writes Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University, in "When Ignorance Isn't Bliss: How Political Ignorance Threatens Democracy."
"Most of the time," Somin notes," only bare majorities know which party has control of the Senate, some 70 percent cannot name either of their state's senators and the vast majority cannot name any congressional candidate in their district at the height of a campaign."
Overall, voters tend to be "abysmally ignorant of even very basic political information... the sheer depth of most individual voters' ignorance is shocking to observers not familiar with the research."
A few examples from many in the report:
* The Patriot Act? What's that? Three-fourths of Americans say they know little or nothing about it. 58 percent say they've heard "nothing" or "not much" about it.
* Seventy percent don't know about the $500 billion new drug benefit added this year to Medicare, which Somin describes as "probably the most significant domestic legislation passed during the Bush administration."
* A majority cannot make even a rough estimate of how many Americans soldiers have been killed in Iraq.
* 61 percent believe that there has been a net loss of U.S. jobs in 2004.
* Over 60 per cent don't know that, during President Bush's term, there has been an explosion in domestic spending (about 25 percent above previous levels) that has enormously increased the national debt.
* Last year, 58 percent of Americans could not name a single federal Cabinet department.
And such voter ignorance is, alas, nothing new:
* In 1964, at the height of Cold War tensions, only 38 percent of the public knew that the Soviet Union was not a member of NATO.
* In 1994, after Republicans took control of Congress under the highly-publicized leadership of Rep. Newt Gingrich, 57 percent of Americans said they'd never heard of Gingrich, despite the avalanche of press coverage.
* In 1996, 67 percent couldn't name their congressman, and only 26 percent knew that senators serve six-year terms.
* In the 2002 elections, only 32 percent of voters knew that the Republican Party controlled the House.
In 1816, Thomas Jefferson wrote: "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
Looking at the grave threats to liberty now facing America, one can only conclude Jefferson was right.
(Source: Cato Institute study: http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-525es.html )
www.libertarianism.org- Check it out!!
Monday, November 01, 2004
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