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| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
1. They're not neck and neck. Obama needs to win 38% of remaining delegates to seal the nomination. Hillary needs to win 62%. See why her getting 55% of the vote in PA doesn't actually help her very much? |
You're lumping in all the delegates together. People who really don't know all the info or whatever make outlandish statements like "Hillary can't win unless a strong superdelegate result pushes her ahead." I don't know what fuzzy math you're accusing me of, but the same goes for Obama. Without superdelegates, neither of them can clinch the nomination, no other way to see it. I hate the idea of SDs as much as the next guy, but, until she's written off as completely having ZERO chance of winning, I think what's best for the idea of democracy is that she stays in.
| quote: | Originally posted by Lebezniatnikov
3. Democratic strongholds? You mean the ones we're going to win no matter who the nominee is? Like California and New York? Yeah, I'll take a candidate that will broaden the electoral map to include places like South Carolina, Iowa, Nebraska, etc. Thanks.
4. To preempt you on the "battleground state" argument the mainstream media is in love with at the moment. Yes, Hillary won in Ohio and PA. That doesn't mean Barack would lose to McCain. In fact, ironically, he polls better than Hillary does in a general election matchup in PA. That said, Obama has won South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Minnesota, Missouri, Washington, Wisconsin, etc. - all "battleground states." |
See, that's where you're wrong. Every Obama supporter likes to put two and two together, although, it's not always so easy. Think about it. 10,000 to 80,000 people are showing up to the caucuses in these red/battleground states of maybe a few million people. You shouldn't assume a 60/40 win by Obama in a red-state means he's gunna beat McCain in November. It doesn't even mean he has a credible shot. Obama supporters have been using this "two and two makes four" math which doesn't really apply. We won't win these red states, it's not happening.
It's the big states with millions of people in them that Hillary is winning. Not only that, but it's the Democratic states that Hillary is winning. If Hillary were to drop out, it will make many people wonder if states like Jersey, Florida, Michigan, and Pennsylvania (among many others) will cave into McCain, it's a huge possibility. But the talking-heads and Obama-bots don't want to face that reality. I think we need to keep the states we had with Kerry and Gore and add one or two and we have the presidency. You're delusional if you think Obama has a shot against McCain in 98% of the red states he won against Hillary in (with 5,000-person caucuses).
As far as bringing up polls, any intelligent adult knows how flawed polls are, no matter who's in front or behind. One week, Hillary's polling better against McCain, another week Obama. Let's not bring 1000-person polls into this.
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Last edited by DJ Eco on Apr-26-2008 at 03:00
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