Daniel Greenfield November 05, 2020
Can pollsters learn to code?
Four
years after utterly discrediting their entire profession, the same
hacks and bean counters did it again. Instead of counting people, they
counted political agendas.
And the polls will never be the same again.
“Trump
Can Still Win, But The Polls Would Have To Be Off By Way More Than In
2016,” Nate Silver headlined a widely shared article at the tail end of
last month. Spoiler alert: they were.
The polls were not measuring the nation, but the agenda of the media and the questioners.
Once
again the media set out to create the perception of an inevitable
Democrat, inventing their leads, boosting their popularity, mixing up
the statistical secret sauce, and spicing it with lies.
The same plan and the same lies that hadn’t worked for them in 2016 was unleashed again.
Meanwhile,
a 97-mile car rally for President Trump raced across Arizona. Tens of
thousands gathered to cheer his determination in Pennsylvania with a
sound like thunder. These Americans, by the countless thousands, stood
up to be counted where no pollster was looking and where no pollster
wanted to see.
President Trump’s base drew together elderly white
voters and Latinos to stop Biden cold in Florida. Meanwhile the working
class voters the media had been telling us had soured on Trump amidst
the trade war and the economic downturn came out for him stronger than
ever.
Their roar toppled Ohio and forced Democrats in Philly to forge new ballots all night along.
For
four years, the media tells Americans who they are and what they
believe. And at least once in four years, Americans get to answer back,
not on the censored platforms of Big Tech, but with every man and woman
finding their own secret voice and speaking not their truth, but the
truth.
The establishment began fighting this election after the
last one. It prepped censorship, unrolled an economic disaster, and
spent the entire cycle frantically lying to potential voters. The lies
failed, but where they failed, voter tampering may succeed. The lies
didn’t convince Americans that there was no point in voting because a
senescent Democrat hack was the inevitable choice.
But they can still serve as the cover-up for the massive voter fraud operating now underway.
Had
the lies worked, the voter fraud would have seemed plausible. But as
the night of Election Day approached, so many conservatives took to the
streets, rallied, and showed their faces. The crowds at the rallies
predicted the massive turnout by working class voters for Trump. And now
the voter fraud is much less plausible. That doesn’t mean that it won’t
happen anyway.
As night approaches day, as ballots are taken away or counted, the real struggle begins.
2020
was never going to be a clean election. The same radicals and corrupt
establishment interests that spied on political opponents and tried to
lock them up are not going to stop at Tammany Hall’s oldest habit of
raising the dead and finding as many ballots as it takes.
What Election Day did was shatter the lies that would have made the fraud seem plausible.
Republicans
stormed the polls. They waited on in line, hour after hour, even as the
media made its bad calls, because it wasn’t just about voting, it was
about making the country see them.
We live in the age of lies. The only way to tell the truth is to stand up and be counted.
Daniel
Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an
investigative journalist and writer focusing on the radical Left and
Islamic terrorism.
Tags: recent, US Election
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