Monday, October 29, 2012

On Election Day it's white voters vs. everyone else

http://thegrio.com/2012/10/25/on-election-day-its-white-voters-vs-everyone-else/


Looking at the polls, this presidential election season is poised to give birth to the most racially polarized electorate in U.S. history.
Whites are backing Mitt Romney in historic numbers, while Obama is garnering historic levels of support among blacks, Latinos and Asians.
While the latest NBC/Wall Street Journal poll has the president in a dead heat with his GOP opponent, recent surveys show wide swings in support based on race. In other words, it looks like white voters versus everyone else.
i wonder how many white voters actually realize what will transpire if they vote Romney in, or are they to clouded to see this white guy will not pull them out but push them further in, race is a enigma that will and has destroyed this country from the melting pot to the land of milk and honey, now only a little better than half no longer see that in their future do to the attitudes toward them have not changed advancements were inevitable some could not be stopped those that could were.
voter blocking had that other half sure their boy who before that strategy only had a snowball's chance in hell of being elected, to feel ok with usurping another's right's to insure your own till then was only derailed by the courts they thought were on their side instead of Americans side.
they've accused the Pres. of trying to divide us you know that is not true, they do the dirt then try to kick it on his shoes. from a Muslim, to an arab, Kenyan, colonial tribesman hater of white people and America,food stamp president, huge spender.
take a look in the mirror ask "do you really believe this ?
i have to side with one of my favorites Joan Walsh, "what's the matter with white people"
Latinos favor the president by a 3-to-1 margin, with Obama maintaining a 74 percent to 26 percent lead, according to LD Vote Predict projections. In a tight race, turnout in the growing Hispanic population is key, though they are underrepresented in the electorate.
Similarly, Americans of Asian descent, now surpassing Latinos as the fastest growing immigrant group, prefer President Obama by an increasingly wide margin.
According to the National Asian American Survey, likely voters of Asian descent back Obama by a 50 to 19 percent margin, with 30 percent of voters undecided.
Among Asian-Americans, Indian-Americans are the most supportive of the president, at 68 percent to 5 percent. The approval rating for Obama in the Indian community is 88 percent, compared to 30 percent for Romney. This comes despite the right-wing anti-Obama stance of the nation’s two Indian-American governors, Nikki Haley (R-South Carolina) and Bobby Jindal (R-Louisiana)—darlings of their party and the highest ranking elected officials in white-conservative dominant Southern states.
The survey also found very high support for the president among Japanese and Chinese Americans, strong support from Korean Americans and the least support among Filipino Americans, who are pro-Romney. Meanwhile, Vietnamese voters have been trending away from the GOP candidate.
is it racism or some new kind of ism that affects common sense. not rich not on Romney's list no matter how much you think you are, all those outrages laws against women and "we the people" in general with no specifics really doesn't speak to an advocate. more to a person aying "elect me i'll tell you what i'm going to do to you after the election, aside from the right wing lie, is Obama that bag look he's done more and tried to do even more for you and the congress denied not him you. who's your buddy?