The silent scream of numbers
The 2004 election was stolen, will someone please tell the media?
ROBERT C. KOEHLER
Tribune Media Services As they slowly hack democracy to death, we're
as alone we citizens as we' ve ever been, protected only by the dust-covered
cliches of the nation's
founding: Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.
It's time to blow off the dust and start paying the price.
The media are not on our side. The politicians are not on our side.
It's just us, connecting the dots, fitting the fragments together, crunching
the numbers, wanting to know why there were so many irregularities in
the last election and why these glitches and dirty tricks and wacko
numbers had not just an anti-Kerry but a racist tinge. This is not about
partisan politics. It's more like: Oh no, this can't be true.
I just got back from what was officially called the National Election
Reform Conference, in Nashville, Tenn., an extraordinary pulling together
of disparate voting-rights activists 30 states were represented, 15
red and 15 blue sponsored by a Nashville group called Gathering To Save
Our Democracy. It had the feel of 1775: citizen patriots taking matters
into their own hands to reclaim the republic. This was the level of
its urgency. Was the election of 2004 stolen? Thus is the question framed
by those who don' t want to know the answer. Anyone who says yes is
immediately a conspiracy nut, and the listener's eyeballs roll. So let's
not ask that question.
Let's simply ask why the lines were so long and the voting machines
so few in Columbus and Cleveland and inner-city and college precincts
across the country, especially in the swing states, causing an estimated
one-third of the voters in these precincts to drop out of line without
casting a ballot; why so many otherwise Democratic ballots, thousands
and thousands in Ohio alone, but by no means only in Ohio, recorded
no vote for president (as though people with no opinion on the presidential
race waited in line for three or six or eight hours out of a fervor
to have their say in the race for county commissioner); and why virtually
every voter complaint about electronic voting machine malfunction indicated
an unauthorized vote switch from Kerry to Bush.
This, mind you, is just for starters. We might also ask why so many
Ph.D.-level mathematicians and computer programmers and other numbers-savvy
scientists are saying that the numbers don't make sense (see, for instance,
www.northnet.org/minstrel, the Web site of Dr. Richard Hayes Phillips,
lead statistician in the Moss v. Bush lawsuit challenging the Ohio election
results). Indeed, the movement to investigate the 2004 election is led
by such people, because the numbers are screaming at them that something
is wrong.
And we might, no, we must, ask with more seriousness than the media
have asked about those exit polls, which in years past were extraordinarily
accurate but last November went haywire, predicting Kerry by roughly
the margin by which he ultimately lost to Bush. This swing is out of
the realm of random chance, forcing chagrined pollsters to hypothesize
a shy Republican factor as the explanation; and the media have bought
this evidence-free absurdity because it spares them the need to think
about the F-word: fraud.
And the numbers are still haywire. A few days ago, Terry Neal wrote
in the Washington Post about Bush's inexplicably low approval rating
in the latest Gallup poll, 45 percent, vs. a 49 percent disapproval
rating. This is, by a huge margin, the worst rating at this point in
a president's second term ever recorded by Gallup, dating back to Truman.
What's wrong with this picture? asks exit polling expert Jonathan Simon,
who pointed these latest numbers out to me. Bush mustered low approval
ratings immediately before the election, surged on Election Day, then
saw his ratings plunge immediately afterward. Yet Big Media has no curiosity
about this anomaly.
Simon, who spoke at the Nashville conference one of dozens of speakers
to give highly detailed testimony on evidence of fraud and dirty tricks
from sea to shining sea said, When the autopsy of our democracy is performed,
it is my belief that media silence will be given as the primary cause
of death.
In contrast to the deathly silence of the media is the silent scream
of the numbers. The more you ponder these numbers, and all the accompanying
data, the louder that scream grows. Did the people's choice get thwarted?
Were thousands disenfranchised by chaos in the precincts, spurious challenges
and uncounted provisional ballots? Were millions disenfranchised by
electronic voting fraud on insecure, easily hacked computers? And who
is authorized to act if this is so? Who is authorized to care?
No one, apparently, except average Americans, who want to be able to
trust the voting process again, and who want their country back.
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