Monday, July 24, 2006

Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen?: Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count

Book Description

On the afternoon of Election Day 2004, the world was abuzz with the news: Exit polls indicated that John Kerry would win the election and become the next president of the United States. That proved not to be the case.

According to the official count-that is the number of votes tallied, not necessarily the number of votes cast-George W. Bush beat Kerry by a margin of three million votes. The exit polls however had predicted a margin of victory for Kerry of five million votes. In every "battleground" state across the nation the final tally swung clearly beyond the exit poll's margin of error to favor the president.

How can one explain this eight-million-vote discrepancy between the Election Day exit polls and the official count? Either the exit poll data was wrong or the official count was wrong.

Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen? analyzes the exit poll data and looks at documented examples of conventional vote suppression and outright vote fraud. It investigates the possibility that enough election fraud occurred to determine the outcome of the presidential race. And it asks the question why neither the government, nor the Democratic Party, nor any major media organization did their own investigation.
Amazon

No I haven't joined the conspiracy club, but these people make a very powerful presentation, caught my attention.

1 Comments:

Blogger madtom said...

Did you see the presentation, the Harlem book fair?

They addressed some of those issues, more importantly they said that those error should be the same everywhere, but the polling error were found in heavy republican counties and in the seven battle ground states, while the polls were right on the mark everywhere else... They made a good argument on TV I have not read the book.

6:11 PM  

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