Showing posts with label Pollster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pollster. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Whose fault is it if blacks can't get cabs?

A former Obama pollster named Cornell Belcher comically wrote a WaPo piece about how blacks have trouble getting cabs.  Shortly after, a revelation forced the WaPo to amend the article after its initial publication.  It seems that Belcher, who wrote this piece critical of cab companies, was actually paid by cab-competitor Uber to do so, and Belcher never disclosed that fact to the Washington Post! But since he is an Obama supporter, it was not seen as a major ethical problem.

Anyway, Belcher wrote about how, as a black man, he has trouble getting cabs.
Hailing cabs isn’t a matter of life and death, but it can negatively impact our overall quality of life, both economically and emotionally.
Funny how he should use the words "life and death."  Because it can be life and death if a cabbie picks up a passenger who robs and kills him.

I now must apologize in advance for writing what everyone knows: most blacks are not criminals.  Most whites are not criminals.  However, a much greater proportion of blacks are criminals than whites (for reasons that would require a whole separate article to explain!).  So if you invite a random stranger into the back of your cab, and he's black, statistically speaking, you have a much higher chance of being robbed or killed.

This isn't racism.  This is fear – fear for one's own life, based on very real statistical probabilities.  I suspect that if liberals like Belcher drove a cab, they would feel the same.
Sixty-six percent, or just about two-thirds of African Americans in Chicago agree that the city’s taxi drivers deliberately discriminate against them. By contrast, only 23 percent of whites say it’s likely that they would be ignored by a cab.
Whites get ignored by cabs?  That's news to me.  Could it be racism?  Maybe we need a study!
Anyway, for once, I have no doubt that this study is true.  I believe that blacks have more trouble getting cabs.  But whose fault is this?  The cabbies'?  They just want to protect their lives.

The real culprit in this are federal, state, and local governments.  They have been relaxing criminal laws for years.  Decriminalizing, reducing jail sentences, and plea bargaining.  The cumulative effect of all these has been to release and/or leave dangerous (usually) men on the streets.  And since, as we've established, black men are more statistically likely to be criminals than whites, it's only rational that cabbies would fear taking black passengers.


Saturday, February 8, 2014

Zogby Report Card: Only 29% say Obama has nation headed in right direction

Pollster John Zogby reports in our weekly White House report card that President Obama's numbers are mixed, both in approval rating and right-direction, wrong-direction.
"I am a numbers guy and the numbers are mixed. Troubling for Obama is that so few Americans feel the U.S. is headed in the right direction (29 percent average) and that the stock market is falling. This could be the inevitable correction and the obvious impact of the Fed's tapering.
“He is also still upside down in public opinion toward Obamacare, though the gap between supporters and opponents is not really widening.
“On the flip side, his approval numbers are averaging at 43 percent, more like 44 percent in the most recent polls, and the numbers of applications for jobless benefits are considerably down. Unemployment is down to 6.6 percent, and only 113,000 new jobs were created, but November and December job numbers have been revised up.
“CBO comes out with a report that appears to be two-handed — Obamacare discourages people from staying on the job one day, but the next day, it encourages people to stay working. Thanks for the clarity, guys.
“And House Speaker John Boehner says there will be no immigration reform law this year, playing to his base and helping the president play to his."
Grade -- C

Saturday, January 19, 2013

NBC/WSJ poll: NRA more popular than entertainment industry


As Washington prepares for a political battle over the Obama White House's proposals to curb gun violence after the Newtown, Conn., shootings, a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll finds that the National Rifle Association is more popular than the entertainment industry.
Forty-one percent of adults see the NRA -- the nation's top gun lobby -- in a positive light, while 34 percent view it in a negative light.
By comparison, just 24 percent have positive feelings about the entertainment industry, and 39 percent have negative ones.
The NRA's fav/unfav score is virtually unchanged from its 41 percent-to-29 percent rating in the Jan. 2011 NBC/WSJ poll, nearly two years before the Newtown shootings.
"That seems to me to be a pretty remarkably stable figure," says GOP pollster Bill McInturff, who conducted this survey with Democratic pollster Peter Hart.
But it's a substantial improvement from the 1990s, when the NRA's negative ratings outweighed its positive ones in the NBC/WSJ survey.
The current poll also shows a sharp divide between attitudes among gun owners and non-gun owners.
Among those who own a gun, 62 percent view the NRA favorably. But that percentage drops to just 25 percent among those who don't.
The full poll -- which was conducted Jan. 12-15 of 1,000 adults (including 300 cell phone-only respondents), and which has a margin of error of plus-minus 3.1 percentage points -- will be released at 6:30 pm ET.

Popular Posts