

Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!
|
novumorganum
5B



Registered: 03/03/06
Posts: 17,276
Loc: the city of dis
Last seen: 9 hours, 17 minutes
|
Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling
#12970641 - 07/29/10 05:53 AM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2010/07/broadus-effect-social-desirability-bias.html
This November, Californians will vote on Proposition 19, which would legalize, tax and regulate marijuana for recreational consumption. Six polls have been conducted since the measure made the ballot in March. Three -- one from Public Policy Polling and two from SurveyUSA -- used automated scripts ("robopolls") to conduct their interviews. The other three, from Field, PPIC, and Reuters/Ipsos -- used live human operators.
The methodologies split in the support they show for the initiative. The three automated surveys all have Prop 19 passing by a double-digit margin. The human-operator polls, meanwhile, each show it trailing narrowly.
Although some of these polls contain incomplete demographic information, the split appears to be driven more by minority voters than by whites. The three automated polls each show the initiative leading by between 28 and 38 among black voters, for instance. But the one traditional poll to break out numbers among African-Americans had it trailing by 12.
Likewise, the traditional polls show Proposition 19 trailing by about 25 points among Hispanics. But the robopolls show support among Hispanics being about even. Even though the margins of error associated with these subgroups are quite large -- especially for blacks, who constitute a relatively small portion of California's population -- the differences are highly statistically significant.
These effects are also evident in two recent national polls on marijuana legalization, from Rasmussen (automated) and Pew (human), respectively. Although Rasmussen's robots posit higher support for marijuana legalization among all racial groups, the differences are much larger for blacks and Hispanics (which Rasmussen lumps into "other" along with groups like Asians).
There are a couple of reasons why these discrepancies might have arisen. One might be that the automated surveys are having difficulty getting a representative sample of minorities. Automated surveys generally have lower response rates, and that impact may be most felt among minorities, who are usually harder to get on the phone.
Nevertheless, this is a relatively highly-rated group of automated surveys, particularly SurveyUSA and PPP, which don't take as many of the shortcuts that some of their competitors do. And so it raises another possibility:
What if voters are more likely to admit their tolerance for marijuana to an automated script, which may create the feeling of greater anonymity? Marijuana usage remains fairly stigmatized in polite society in America, enough so that even liberal politicians like Barbara Boxer, Dianne Feinstein, Jerry Brown and Barack Obama have refused to state their support for legalizing the drug. But as most Americans between ages 20 and 55 have smoked marijuana, they may not consider it such a big deal in the privacy of their homes -- or the privacy of the ballot booth.
This might also explain why the split is larger among black and Hispanic voters. Marijuana usage is almost certainly more stigmatized when associated with minorities, and drug possession arrests occur much more frequently in minority communities. This is in spite of the fact that rates of marijuana consumption are only a smidgen higher among blacks than among whites, and are somewhat lower among Hispanics. (Although, note that the link I just pointed you to is also based on survey data, and so could be subject to some of the same biases.)
Perhaps this hypothesis is overstated, and drug use does not carry the same stigma in California that it does elsewhere in the country. When I visited San Francisco for four days last winter, I twice saw people quite nonchalantly smoking joints in bars, something you'll only see once in a blue moon in New York or Chicago (or maybe I've just been going out to the wrong places).
Nevertheless, it's possible that we're seeing some sort of Bradley effect in reverse, which I've reluctantly dubbed the "Broadus Effect" after the given name of the rapper Snoop Dogg, himself a frequent consumer of cannabinoid-rich products.
The original Bradley Effect, named for former Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley, occurs when respondents in surveys are asked about socially desirable behaviors, such as being free from racial prejudice. Although the racial version of Bradley effect itself is probably a thing of the past, social desirability bias may manifest itself in other ways. Automated polls have sometimes shown relatively lower levels support for gay marriage initiatives, for instance, in states like Maine and California. Homophobia is fairly common, but has become socially undesirable; the purveyors of the automated polls have sometimes claimed that their respondents are free to be more honest when there's not another human being on the line. If the theory holds, automated polls might also provide a setting for voters to be more honest about their feelings on marijuana use, another behavior that is probably more widespread (and privately tolerated) than it is socially acceptable. If so, that would be good news for Prop 19.
|
Rabid Jelly Bean
Stranger



Registered: 01/25/10
Posts: 394
Loc: TX
Last seen: 20 days, 18 hours
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: novumorganum]
#12970677 - 07/29/10 06:20 AM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
All those pole results have been driving me crazy. Its got to pass!
|
blujay
pass it b*ch!



Registered: 04/01/09
Posts: 4,721
Last seen: 20 days, 7 hours
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: novumorganum]
#12970950 - 07/29/10 08:41 AM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
It's gotta be bogus, I just can't believe that the black community wouldn't embrace an opportunity to knock off one more thing they're commonly discriminated upon. Surely it's common knowledge, that while every officer is certainly not predjudiced, the number of blacks in jail for drug offenses is disproportionately large, and that is to suggest not that black do most of the drug trading, but that there is a (unacceptable, but what can we do?) number of officers who are predjudiced (or racist) and that legalizing weed would be in their best interests.
--------------------
 
wat man rly
|
BirdsIView
Mr. Helms

Registered: 07/19/07
Posts: 718
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: blujay]
#12971558 - 07/29/10 11:12 AM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
Just imagine being a black person getting asked whether you want weed to be legalized by some white person you've never met before. The likelihood that you're going to say yes is going to go down dramatically. But, once put in a voters booth with complete anonymity a lot of those nos will turn to yes
|
aiyobro
Good Looking Bitch



Registered: 06/30/07
Posts: 9,088
Loc: Outer Space
Last seen: 4 hours, 1 minute
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: BirdsIView]
#12972256 - 07/29/10 01:19 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
what sucks is people that work have no time to register or even get out and vote i could still see this 50/50
|
whatever123
Whatever I did, I'm sorry



Registered: 04/07/05
Posts: 2,613
Loc: San Diego, CA
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: aiyobro]
#12973458 - 07/29/10 04:45 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
People that work don't have time to register or vote? So who do you think has been out there voting and making a difference for the last thousand elections? The unemployed and homeless? If this matters to anyone in the slightest bit, they can find ten minutes to register. And if you legitimately are working the entire time the polls are open and can't get time off to vote, then vote absentee. There's no excuse to not participate.
-------------------- Koala Koolio said:
there should be a 3 month waiting period between registration and posting.
|
bongoboy2000
Bongoboy2000

Registered: 02/07/04
Posts: 403
Loc: Seattle
Last seen: 15 days, 11 hours
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: novumorganum]
#12973736 - 07/29/10 05:36 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
Quote:
Although Rasmussen's robots posit higher support for marijuana legalization among all racial groups, the differences are much larger for blacks and Hispanics (which Rasmussen lumps into "other" along with groups like Asians).
Omg. Does that mean the survey only asks whether you're 'White' or 'Other'....?
That would be hilarious if it wasn't so shamefully horrible..
-------------------- ...I got nothin..
|
aiyobro
Good Looking Bitch



Registered: 06/30/07
Posts: 9,088
Loc: Outer Space
Last seen: 4 hours, 1 minute
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: whatever123]
#12973909 - 07/29/10 06:15 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
Quote:
whatever123 said: People that work don't have time to register or vote? So who do you think has been out there voting and making a difference for the last thousand elections? The unemployed and homeless? If this matters to anyone in the slightest bit, they can find ten minutes to register. And if you legitimately are working the entire time the polls are open and can't get time off to vote, then vote absentee. There's no excuse to not participate.
nigga i dont know how to vote
|
Nymphaea
Smoker/Tripper/Legalizer



Registered: 04/16/09
Posts: 1,543
Loc: Michigan
Last seen: 1 day, 6 hours
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: aiyobro]
#12975059 - 07/29/10 10:13 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|

Please vote yall in Cali. Do it for the Shroomery.
--------------------
Edited by Nymphaea (07/29/10 10:18 PM)
|
whatever123
Whatever I did, I'm sorry



Registered: 04/07/05
Posts: 2,613
Loc: San Diego, CA
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: Nymphaea]
#12979088 - 07/30/10 09:42 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
I'm gonna do more than vote. I'm volunteering to do phone banks and door to doors and such. I'm going to do every little thing in my power to make this pass. California needs to set an example with this.
-------------------- Koala Koolio said:
there should be a 3 month waiting period between registration and posting.
|
Nymphaea
Smoker/Tripper/Legalizer



Registered: 04/16/09
Posts: 1,543
Loc: Michigan
Last seen: 1 day, 6 hours
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: whatever123]
#12981093 - 07/31/10 12:28 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
Quote:
whatever123 said: I'm gonna do more than vote. I'm volunteering to do phone banks and door to doors and such. I'm going to do every little thing in my power to make this pass. California needs to set an example with this.
Good for you bro! Keep it up! We need more people like you.
--------------------
|
blujay
pass it b*ch!



Registered: 04/01/09
Posts: 4,721
Last seen: 20 days, 7 hours
|
Re: Nate Silver analyzes Prop 19 polling [Re: BirdsIView]
#12983163 - 07/31/10 09:43 PM (1 year, 9 months ago) |
|
|
Quote:
BirdsIView said: Just imagine being a black person getting asked whether you want weed to be legalized by some white person you've never met before. The likelihood that you're going to say yes is going to go down dramatically. But, once put in a voters booth with complete anonymity a lot of those nos will turn to yes 
I have full-detail full-disclosure (receiving, not sending) conversations about modern anti-prohibitionism and it's advantages with people from every walk of life and every race, who are complete strangers, almost 1/3 of the shifts I work, often twice in a day. Working at a tobbacco outlet.
--------------------
 
wat man rly
| |
|
|
You cannot start new topics / You cannot reply to topics HTML is disabled / BBCode is enabled
Moderator: veggie 836 topic views. 2 members, 73 guests and 1 web crawlers are browsing this forum.
[ Toggle Favorite | Print Topic ]
| | |
|
|
|