Commentary Oregon Daily Emerald Thursday, November 11, 2004 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 (EN SUDICK EDITOR IN CHIEF STEVEN R. NEUMAN MANAGING EDITOR JARED PABEN AYISHA YAHYA NEWS EDITORS PARKER HOWE1.J, SENIOR NEWS REPORTER MORJAU BALING1T MEGHANN CUNIFF KARA HANSEN ANTHONY LUCERO CANELA WOOD NEWS REPORTERS CLAYTON JONES SPORTS EDITOR JON ROETMAN SENIOR SPORTS REPORTER STEPHEN MILLER BRIAN SMITH SPORTS REPORTERS RYAN NYBURC PULSE EDITOR NATASHA CHIUNGERIAN SENIOR PULSE REPORTER DAHVI FISCHER AMY LICHTY RYAN MURPHY PULSE REPORTERS DAVID JAGERNAUTH EDITORIAL EDITOR JENNIFER MCBRIDE AILEE SIATER CHUCK SLOTHOWER TRAVIS WILLSE COLUMNISTS ASHLEY GRIFFIN SUPPLEMENT FREELANCE EDITOR (ABE BRADLEY NEWS FREELANCE EDITOR/ DIRECTOR OF RECRUITMENT DANIELLE HICKEY PHOTO EDITOR LAUREN WIMER SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER TIM BOBOSKY PHOTOGRAPHER NICOLE BARKER PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHER ERIK BISHOFF PART-TIME PHOTOGRAPHER BRET FURTWANGLER GRAPHIC ARTIST KIRA PARK DESIGN EDITOR ELLIOTT ASBURY CHARLIE CALDWELL DUSTIN REESE BRIANNE SHOLIAN DESIGNERS SHADRABEESLEY IEANNIE EVERS COPY CHIEFS KIMBERLY BLACKFIELD PAUL THOMPSON SPORTS COPY EDITORS AMANDA EVRARD AMBER L1NDROS NEWS COPY EDITORS IJNDSAY BURT PULSE COPY EDITOR ADRIENNE NELSON ONLINE EDITOR SLADE LEESON WEBMASTER BUSINESS (541)346-5511 IUDY RIEDL GENERAL MANAGER KATHY CARBONE BUSINESS MANAGER REBECCA CRITCHETT RECEPTIONIST NATHAN FOSTER AIBING GUO ANDREW LEAHY JOHN LONG MALLORY MAHONEY HOLLY MISTELL DISTRIBUTION ADVERTISING (541)346-3712 MELISSA GUST ADVERTISING DIRECTOR TYLER MACK SALES MANAGER ALEX AMES MATT BETZ HERON CAUSCH-DOLEN MEGAN HAMLIN KATE HIRONAKA MAEGAN KASER-LEE MIA LEIDELMEYER EMILY PHILBIN SHANNON ROGERS SALES REPRESENTATIVES KELLEE KAUFTHEIL AD ASSISTANT CLASSIFIED (541)3464343 TRINA SHANAMAN CLASSIFIED MANAGER KATY GAGNON SABRINA GOWETTE LESUE STRAIGHT KERI SPANGLER KATIE STRINGER CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ASSOCIATES PRODUCTION (541)3464381 MICHELE ROSS PRODUCTION MANAGER TARA ^1 HAM PRODUCTION COORDINATOR JEN CRAM LET KRISTEN DICHARRY CAMERON GAUT ANDY HOLLAND DESIGNERS The Oregon Daily Emerald is pu6 lished daily Monday through Fri day during the school year by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Ore gon, Eugene, Ore. The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memohal Union. The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. WCU., 'ST'* HA,W> -TO *Tff-A\6HT WK6H 'foo’n.c ALt —-- fcAOrHT- VOlM(rCt>... Eric Florip | Freelance illustrator ■ In my opinion Playing Ofl Morality John Zogby is a man who likes to be on top of things. Zogby, who has nurtured his public opinion business into one of the pre-eminent polling organizations in the world, has made a living making sure neither he nor his wide variety of clients are caught with their pants down. Pollsters make a point of being right — at least within the confi dence interval — but like all practi tioners of an imperfect science, they can be wrong. And this year, many were, Zogby included. As late as election day, he predicted a win for Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, The Observer-Dispatch (Utica, N.Y.) reported. The guess,' though wrong, wasn’t a bad one. A shift of a percentage point or two in Ohio, or any of dozens of other plau sible electoral scenarios would have vindicated him. And by the after noon of Nov. 2, many, this colum nist included, thought that the office was more likely Kerry’s than not. (The problems with the exit polls on which I and others based our guess es are interesting, but outside the scope of this column.) Wrong guesses are the opinion pollsters’ eternal burden. The public and the media alike place faith in their numbers, but they have only the raw sampling of a fickle popu lace to guide their estimations. But something stranger happened to the opinions survey around the election. “When we did our polling before the election and asked people the five most important issues on their minds, moral values just never came up,” Zogby explained to the San Francisco Chronicle. “I’m baffled. It was obviously extremely important as a driver.” Moral values did come up, as TRAVIS WILLSE RIVALLESS WIT pundits have praised or lamented. According to an Edison Media Re search/Mitofsky International exit poll, a plurality (22 percent) of vot ers listed “moral values” as the most important criterion for choosing a president, followed by the economy (20), terrorism (19) and Iraq (15). But saying that moral values were critical to this election, and leaving it at that, obfuscates a subtler politi cal landscape than the notion that a dramatic electoral re-engagement of conservative, evangelical Christian voters decisively (and maybe single handedly) derailed a Kerry victory. Moral issues, whatever they may be, are important for voters across a spectrum of categories. Gallup Editor in Chief Frank New port observed in the same Chronicle article, “It’s not some particular group or people who are members of an organization. It seems to be much broader.” Muddling analysis of the issue is the oversimplified and mostly wrong notion that gay marriage ballot measures (a moral issue for some) spurred turnout for President Bush. In the 11 states where such initia tives were on the ballot (all of them passed), Bush did improve his share of the popular vote by 2.26 percent age points over his 2000 election fig ures (from 52.2 percent to 54.4 per cent). But his national share notched up 3.22 percentage points (47.9 percent to 51.1 percent). Bush’s percentage point gains, it turns out, were actually 42.4 percent smaller in states with the amend ments on the ballots. (Raw numbers were taken from uncertified CNN 2004 election results and the Federal Election Commission.) While one could arguably chalk up a small part of this gap to greater pre-existing saturation of Republican support in the states (nine of which were red in both election years), the presence of the measures certainly didn’t help him. But the worst and most harmful oversimplification is that of charac terizing “moral values” as anything too specific (say, as code for the reli gious inclinations of socially conser vative evangelical Protestants). A well-considered letter to the editor that graced this page recently (“ ‘Moral values’ differ greatly,” Nov. 9) elucidated this point: “ ‘Moral values’ is the big post-election buzz word but it is meaningless ... Ameri cans simply have no unified definition of what constitutes the moral position.” This sort of sanity, however, will likely and regrettably sink into a ca cophony of reductionism perpetuat ed by parties who stand to lose from a fuller discussion of the point. Whatever the case, Democratic strategists could stand to pay atten tion to at least one point: The 22 per cent of voters who cited moral val ues as their top electoral concern turned out for Bush over Kerry by a margin of 80-18. While this says lit tle about the Democratic Party’s po sition on moral issues, it’s clear it can make up some ground by clari fying and refocusing its message. traviswillse@ dailyemerald. com OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged, and should be sent to letters@dailyemerald.com or submitted at the Oregon Daily Emerald office, EMU Suite 300. Electronic submissions are preferred. Letters are limited to 250 words, and guest commentaries to 550 words. Authors are limited to one submission per calendar month. Submissions should include phone number and address for verification. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald ■ Editorial Get in line, it is time for cjuacks and smacks Quacks to Seoul, South Korea’s, Hanyang Uni versity for their generous gift of $500,000 and Quacks to alumnus Dave Petrone for his gener ous gift of $2.5 million to the University. We now feel sorta guilty about planning to skip out on our student loans. Sorta. Smacks to the Career Fair organizers for serv ing up another long buffet of tacky corporate lacky positions. We know the job market isn’t great but this is ridiculous. Fifth-year senior is sounding pretty good. Smacks to anyone who won’t let the election die already. Analysis in the name of political sci ence is one thing, but come on! The campaign is over, stop the spinning. Quacks to the delightfully amusing ramblings of conspiracy theorists who warrant an exception to the above Smack. In their honor... Smacks to the Illuminati for wiring Bush dur ing the debates and Smacks to Nick Cage for making us afraid to park our cars at the Mason’s lodge during football games at Autzen. Quacks to the resignation of Attorney Gen eral John Ashcroft — not that we didn’t love his big-brotheresque policies, heavy-handed destruction of states’ rights and civil liberties, crazy fundamentalist beliefs (dancing is a sin?) and nail-bitting terror warnings, but we’re happy to see him go. Quacks to California voters for green-light ing embryonic stem cell research to the tune of $3 billion. Smacks to California voters for rejecting a bal lot measure that would have reformed their state’s uniquely harsh Three Strikes law. In gener al, basing criminal law on a random sports rule seems like a bad idea, even when it is America’s pasttime. But when shoplifting a candy bar can land people in prison for the rest of their lives, something needs to change. Smacks to the Smart Thick, a new consumer tank currently under development that would be more massive than the Hummer. You heard us: three inches higher, four feet longer, 3,000 pounds heavier and even less fuel efficient. It’s the perfect small penis mobile for guys who like haulin’ shit and showing wilderness areas who’s the boss — just remember to stay within one mile of a gas station at all times. Smacks to the man to brought a handgun into a San Francisco school and threatened students and teachers in order to rob two employees. Schools are intended to be safe havens for our children, and let’s keep them that way. Quacks to the pilot sex education program ap proved in Maryland that discusses homosexuality and uses a video that shows 10th graders how to put on a condom. Let’s teach children at an early age how to be safe. Quacks to “Law & Order” for taking on “tough guy” actor Dennis Farina as a new char acter. With his steel-gray hair and craggy face, how could you not love this ex-cop? What is that you say? Who is this guy? We agree. Smacks to holiday decorations hitting shelves two months before Christmas and New Years. Heck, why not start hauling out the tree in July? Quacks to President Bush for nominating White House counsel Alberto Gonzales to fill John Ashcroft’s attorney general post. Gonza les is a moderate, and he would be the first His panic attorney general. Quacks to veterans. ‘Nuff said. EDITORIAL BOARD Jennifer Sudick Editor in Chief David Jagernauth Editorial Editor Steven R. Neuman Managing Editor Gabe Bradley Freelance Editor