And he will be a wild man; his hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against him
Genesis 16:12
Florida
is one of those places where wild men, or more accurately from the
Hebrew, "wild asses" have a lot of presence. Looking, county by county,
precinct by precinct, you can see how much influence place of residence
has on one's voting choices. In a sea of red, virtually any county
having a university is blue, for instance, but life is more complex than
that and there are many factors that affect what kinds of people vote
in certain ways. But Florida is not much different than the US in
general other than that Florida is usually quite near 50/50 in any
election and so small differences have a big influence on elections.
CNN.com posted some fascinating data
yesterday; the sort of thing that delights a Freakonomics fan eager to
see correlations between things we don't ordinarily think about as well
as those things we usually do. Sure, some of the categories are
tautological. Conservatives and Republicans vote red. That white
men tend to be red and white women only a bit less so, isn't surprising
either, but the way income plotted against political leanings varies by
income bracket surprised me, at least. It's not quite true that more money makes for more red leanings.
But
age is a very strong factor with those over 65 being substantially more
Republican and those under 30 being even more strongly biased the
other way. Not much surprise at all there, nor is racial identification
Vs. politics surprising even if it's possibly the strongest
correlation. People identifying themselves as white are about 69% red
Vs. about 7% for claimants to African-American status.
But
the one of so many factors that screams for attention and doesn't get
enough of it I think, is that religion, or religious identification
seems to be one of the most dominant factors of all and that if you want
to predict how someone will vote, asking what group they identify with
and how often they attend functions will give you a good prediction. In
terms of religious fervor alone: if you never attend services, you're
62% likely to be blue. Go more than once a week and that drops to 36%.
Call
yourself Protestant and you're 42% likely to be blue, but Catholics,
not surprisingly to me, are closer to 50% Liberal minded. But lump
Jews, Muslims, Buddhists and others together into "other" and any one of
those others has a whopping 74% chance of voting blue. Atheists?
Almost the same at 70%. The name you call God, if you in fact believe
in one, may have more influence on your choices than all the reasons you
give yourself regarding economic or foreign policy.
I'm not too surprised about the statistics. In the 40s and 50s most people were likely to vote like their parents and people didn't question party platforms so much. Religion probably played a much lesser role then than it does now, as ironic as that is.
ReplyDeleteOur father enjoyed engaging his children in spirited political conversations from the time we were children and he frequently would say, "Go look it up!" He always shared his views and beliefs with us but he also guided us toward self discovery. When my sister ended up more left leaning and I ended up center left while Dad remained a staunch conservative, we frequently ended up on opposing sides but while he enjoyed those great arguments, I think he also secretly pleased that we would stand up to him and make our own choices.
A wise and honorable man your father surely personifies rockync.
DeleteRN he was an extraordinary man and I am most honored to have had the privilege to be his daughter. He died last year and I have truly missed those great debates we would have had during this election.
ReplyDeleteI am so sorry for you loss. He was no doubt proud of you and felt blessed to have you as his daughter.
DeleteI like to think he was proud of me more often than disappointed. No matter what though I know he loved me unconditionally and I him.
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