At Least It’s Over

While I was driving into work this morning, Kerry conceded. While he hasn’t made his speech yet as I write this, I’m assuming he’ll be magnanimous though in reality he’s being a realist. Not enough provo votes to overcome the current Bush lead. Maybe it’s better for Kerry anyway – as I wrote last night, even if he won Ohio and the election, he’d be facing an impossible task of uniting the country, fixing Iraq and digging the country out of the economic tarpit that it’s currently mired in all without the mandate of the popular vote.

Secondly, according to MSNBC, turnout estimation is 59%. That’s still a failing grade. Rod commented that in Australia, voting is mandatory. I like that idea, but he also pointed out that it would “never fly” in the US. Never say never…

With the result no longer in doubt, I’m imposing a personal media blackout for the next month or so. The closest I’m willing to get to politics for a while is is The West Wing.

Can’t Sleep – Long Election Analysis Post

I’ll be honest – I started Election Day feeling cautiously optimistic. Obviously, that feeling as been proved way, way wrong. Now, its 2:30am, I can’t sleep so I’ve been futzing with Excel and written a following long piece on voting tendencies of different age groups.

Regardless of the eventual outcome in Ohio (which I am most certainly not optimistic about) Bush has won the popular vote hands down – by a significantly larger margin than he lost it in 2000. Any way you slice that, it’s bad for Democrats. Even if Kerry wins Ohio – and the election – he faces a hostile Republican majority in the Congress without a national mandate and an increasingly conservative media ready to crucify him at any turn. On the other hand, if Bush wins Ohio – as I expect will happen eventually – then we get four “more of the same” years – and the last four year were no picnic. And either way, the likely two week delay in processing Ohio’s provisional ballots further divides what is an already polarized electorate.

Right now, going back to blissful ignorance of politics is looking mighty tempting. But I won’t do it. Instead, I want to get more involved in issues I care about in order to affect change. For example, one thing I’d like to see in the coming years is the election reform. I’m not talking about abandoning the Electoral College – which isn’t going to happen w/o a constitutional amendment that has almost zero chance of passing. I’m talking about the changing the low voter turnout that has plagued American elections for decades. Final results won’t be in for a while, what with provisional and absentee ballots, but according to CNN’s current numbers, around 110 million votes have been tabulated, with 95% of the precincts reporting. That means there were around 116 million votes cast (plus the absentee and provisional votes that haven’t been counted yet). However, the US population is estimated by the Census Bureau to be around 295 million. Excluding the estimated 25.7% of the population that is under 18, that leaves nearly 219 million potential voters. Even with this year’s record turnout, we’ve only managed to include 53% of the country in the voting process (maybe low 60’s after with the yet-to-be-counted ballots). While I understand it’s every citizen’s duty to vote, it’s the government’s duty to enable the citizens to do their duty. We should treat the turnout as a grade, and 53% is a failure.

I don’t expect election reform to be a priority of a Republican administration or congress, as conventional wisdom states that larger turnout favors Democrats. Of course, this election’s results fly directly in the face of that idea. However, there are those blogs I read that have suggested that Kerry lost the popular vote because the “much-ballyhooed youth vote simply did not show up”. I thought this too – until I ran the numbers.

The most underrepresented age group in the election (according to the national exit poll) was 18-29 years olds – 22% of the voting age population yet only 17% of the voters in the exit poll. And that group overwhelmingly favored Kerry 54%-44%. By comparison, people 60 and older are also around 22% of the voting population but represented 25% of the voters. Not surprisingly, that group favored Bush 53%-46%. However, it’s interesting to note that if the voter turnout age distribution had matched the actual census distribution, Bush would still have won the popular vote 49.6% to 48.8%. In the census-adjusted model, Kerry is negatively effected by the 30-44 age group, that favored Bush by four points and were under represented in the exit polls – 32% of the voting population but only 28% of voters.

(In fairness, the exit poll isn’t completely accurate – based on the voting turnout age distribution, it estimated a 50% – 48.5% Bush popular vote win and we know Bush won by a wider margin than that. Furthermore, as we are accutely aware, popular vote doesn’t win the presendency and given the closeness of several state races, the youth vote might have shifted the Electoral College in Kerry’s favor.)

I’d like to do more analysis of this exit poll data. There were certain questions that I think are fascinating. For example, 43% of people thought things are going well in Iraq, and 90% of them voted for Bush. 52% of people thought things are going badly, and 82% of them voted for Kerry. Given that people perception of Iraq is directly effected by the media reporting, it becomes fairly obviously the dramatic role that the media plays in our elections. So there’s another issue for me to get involved in – undoing the damage of media consolidation.

But for now, I’m going to try and sleep.

Horror Stories for Halloween

Halloween is the time for scary movies. Julie and I have seen two since I got back from OOPSLA – 28 Days Later… and The Grudge. I’m not sure I would have called 28 Days Later “Scary As Hell” but I did really like it. It had a real plot and real characters that had real arcs. True, it also had zombies running around, but that was much less the focus than I expected. In fact, I think it had some thinly veiled social commentary (that I can’t discuss w/o spoiling the movie).

On the other hand, The Grudge is simply a run-of-the-mill haunted house story. Not that scary and no plot or characters worth mentioning. Simply a series of loosely strung together scary scenes with little consistency. Which was a bummer as it did have a great opening scene. After all the comparisons to The Ring (which I liked, though not as much as most people) and the fact that Sam Raimi was producing, it was very dissappointing.

Of course, neither of these can compare to the potential horrors of election fraud on Tuesday. Apparently, over 80 lawsuits have already been filed (on both sides) which I don’t take as a good sign.

Photo Story 3

Since I’m at OOPSLA, I’m behind on my blog reading. But in case someone else hasn’t already blogged it, go check out Photo Story 3. I’ve got an an 20 month old, over 2000 pictures taken this year and a pile of relatives who are clamoring regularly for pictures so I’m pretty excited about this.

Other MSFT Bloggers at OOPSLA

Some other ‘softies blogging OOPSLA:

  • Keith Short talks about the DSL Tutorial and apologizes for our keynote demo.
  • Steve Cook talks about the MDA panel and says the keynote demo “wasn’t such a great idea”
  • Stuart Kent describes the DSL Toolkit and calls the keynote demo a “commercial break”
  • Michael Lehman briefly describes his work building a software factory for the DSL Tutorial and blogs Jack’s GPCE keynote presentation on Software Factories

Finally, Brant Carter took me to task for pointing out that Alan Kay ended his Turing Lecture with a product demo. Brant makes good points and I agree with all him. I think all the ‘softies blogging OOPSLA have acknowledged how poorly this went and I certainly didn’t mean to imply that somehow we were vindicated by Alan’s demoing stuff in his lecture. I plan on giving Squeak a deep look when I get some free time – I have an 18 month old son so Alan’s lecture on teaching computer science resonated with me.