Anonymous ID: 6a4b08 Dec. 22, 2022, 11:50 a.m. No.17998623   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8661 >>8679

>>17998427

>>17998438

Check out this nigger

muh democracy

 

A different response to conservatives who have started 2021 by rudely calling attention to the riot apologists of 2020 is: Shut Up. A more sophisticated way to say Shut Up is to accuse conservatives whose memories go back more than three months of engaging in “whataboutism.”This is the position of University of Wisconsin political scientist Kenneth R. Mayer, who believes that any public official “who does not immediately and unequivocally condemn [the Capitol riot] without using the words ‘I understand,’ ‘but,’ or any variant suggesting that the rioters had a point but went too far, should forfeit their right to hold public office.” Furthermore, “any elected official who engages in ‘whataboutism,’ or complains that the other side does it too, should leave next.”

 

https://www.city-journal.org/about-whataboutism-and-political-hypocrisy

 

Opinion: We just witnessed a coup attempt in Washington, D.C. Now we must choose: Democracy or Trump.

Kenneth R. Mayer

 

"Published: 7:08 p.m. CT Jan. 6, 2021Updated: 7:14 p.m. CT Jan. 6, 2021"

Anonymous ID: 6a4b08 Dec. 22, 2022, noon No.17998661   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8679

>>17998623

>This is the position of University of Wisconsin political scientist Kenneth R. Mayer,

voter id is rayciss

 

Hillary Clinton’s claims about voter suppression in Georgia and Wisconsin

Image without a caption

Analysis by Salvador Rizzo

Staff writer

March 6, 2019 at 3:00 a.m. EST

 

It’s a case Clinton made often during the 2016 campaign (though we note she did not visit Wisconsin after winning the Democratic nomination). “If there’s one place where we were caught by surprise, it was Wisconsin,” she wrote in her post-mortem book, “What Happened.” “Polls showed us comfortably ahead, right up until the end.”

 

Did this Wisconsin law prevent 40,000 to 80,000 voters in the state from casting ballots in 2016? We asked Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill to weigh in, and he pointed to several studies.

 

For the low end (40,000),Clinton was relying on a 2017 study led by Kenneth R. Mayer,a political scientist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

 

Mayer and researcher Michael DeCrescenzo surveyed 293 registered voters who didn’t vote in Dane and Milwaukee counties. That covers “the two largest metro areas in the state (Milwaukee and Madison) and have the largest low-income and minority populations, which research has shown are most likely to be affected by voter ID requirements.”

 

Their study mentions voters who were deterred, meaning “they lack qualifying ID or mention ID as a reason for not voting. Voter ID could be a nominal reason or the primary reason for not voting.” Mayer and DeCrescenzo estimated that anywhere from 11,701 to 23,252 voters were “deterred.”In his responses to The Fact Checker, Mayer said “14,000 is the equivalent of the most likely number.”

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2019/03/06/hillary-clintons-claims-about-voter-suppression-georgia-wisconsin/

Anonymous ID: 6a4b08 Dec. 22, 2022, 12:05 p.m. No.17998679   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17998623

>Check out thisnigger

 

>muh democracy

>>17998661

Kenneth Mayer is a major distributor ofMIS/DIS/ AND MALINFORMATION

 

Editorial Board: Fake outrage over class syllabus shows that sometimes facts really don’t care about your feelings

Uncomfortable truths about Trump administration remain true, despite Fox News' best efforts

by Badger Herald Editorial Board · Jan 25, 2019

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A favorite talking point of the political right is that “facts don’t care about your feelings.” The sentiment is often inappropriately and inaccurately applied to situations that don’t warrant it, but there are certain times where it seems to ring true. The recent outrage over a University of Wisconsin political science class syllabus is such a time.

 

For those who haven’t stayed up to date with the latest instance of feigned outrage and imaginary conservative victimization, allow us to fill you in.

 

It all began when UW political science professor Kenneth Mayer issued a syllabus for his class on the American presidency,which included a section on our current president, Donald Trump, and those who have tied themselves to him. It listed a series of uncomfortable, yet substantially true, statements about the political thorns that have afflicted Trump’s side since day one: Russian hacking, the investigation into collusion, and a corrupt inner-circle.

 

It expanded on how those who see Trump as “unqualified” and “unfit” often point to the staggering amount of evidence piling up against him and those closest to him — such as the U.S. intelligence agency reports that Russian agents attempted to hack the Democratic National Committee and the Hillary Clinton campaign so as to benefit then-candidate Trump, and the indictments and arrests of several high-ranking Trump campaign officials, including his lawyer Michael Cohen.

Anonymous ID: 6a4b08 Dec. 22, 2022, 12:28 p.m. No.17998741   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8810

Maricopa County installs new elections director

Reynaldo "Rey" Valenzuela, a 26-year veteran of the department, becomes the permanent director after filling in since January.

Rebekah L. Sanders

The Republic | azcentral.com

 

Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes names new elections director.

Reynaldo "Rey" Valenzuela, a veteran of the department, becomes the permanent elections chief.