Friday, April 29, 2011

The democrats are still slithering in Wisconsin:

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It's been tough on the leftists in what was, until recently, a state nearly as neo-communist as Washington.  But now, reality is setting in, and even the prototypical soviet republic state, Massachusetts, has figured it out... and begun the process of reining in the union extortionists.

While cowardice, as evidenced by the flea-baggers who tried to stop representative government in Wisconsin, is an increasing democrat meme, it's understandable when you're standing around, watching the wheels come off from your lies and deceit at warp speed.

So, you engage in this kind of tripe:

Wisconsin Dems "Push-Calling" Recall Wirch Petition Signers

"Push-polling"" is where a type of campaign tactic where, under the guise of a poll, misleading or inflammatory questions are asked about an opposing candidate. The point of the push-poll is to persuade the person being polled as to a candidate or issue, rather than actually soliciting opinions.

A similar tactic is being used by the Wisconsin Democratic Party to try to get people who signed petitions to recall Democratic state Senator Robert Wirch to say that they were deceived or didn't know what they were signing. The tactic is not a push-poll, but a call seeking to verify petition signatures in which suggestive statements are made which would call into question the signature.

As reflected in the audio below, the push-call starts with the following introduction suggesting that there has been a widespread problem with petition signatures:
"The reason we're calling is there were reports from people in the community that out of state paid circulators were misleading people about what they were being asked to sign and we have reports of them tricking voters into thinking they were signing a petition, say at a nearby shopping mall, or providing them with misleading information, so all we were calling was to find out is if you did intend to sign the petition to remove Democratic Senator Wirch from office."
Before the audio started, the caller did identify herself as calling from the Democratic Party. According to the person who provided me with the audio, the number which showed up on the caller i.d. was the number used by the group fighting the recall on behalf of Wirch.

Here is the audio (note: the voices are slightly distorted because the woman receiving the call is afraid that her identity would be revealed, and the audio cuts off the last few seconds of the call where the first names of both people are used):



The point of the introduction is to suggest that the petition signer may have been deceived, and that the phone call merely is a form of verification. This is not an attempt to solicit facts, but to suggest facts to the person who signed the petition.



More:
Swell.
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