Home > The Silence of the Scams: Psychological Resistance to Facing Election Fraud
The Silence of the Scams: Psychological Resistance to Facing Election Fraud
by Open-Publishing - Saturday 16 April 200511 comments
Few Americans know about the historic event that happened on January 6, 2005, the official date for counting electoral votes. For the first time since 1877, congressmembers challenged the electoral count. Representative Stephanie Tubbs-Jones of Ohio, accompanied by the lone senator, Barbara Boxer of California, led the challenge of the Ohio vote count. Although massive fraud was reported around the country, only Ohio was officially cited.
It is curious that an issue so profound and consequential is barely on the radar screens of most Americans, especially those who voted for Kerry.
Though we are not certain of the actual outcome, statistically impossible discrepancies exist between results of exit polls and official counts in counties without paper trails. Also documented are patterns of anecdotes about corrupted procedures and accounts of strange behaviors, phenomena and illegal interventions in Ohio as well as other places. Many say there is fraud in every election, but there was far more in 2004 than in any previous year, and if the errors were random, about half would go in Kerry?s favor. Virtually all went in Bush?s favor.
But rather than demanding a thorough investigation, the American people seem eager to forget the incidents and put the election behind them, thus implicitly supporting such corruption.
A Political Psychological Puzzlement
Under what conditions do millions of allegedly "free" people knowingly acquiesce to being deceived, dominated and deprived of their own political will? How is it that even those who were politically engaged for the first time resign themselves to an unjust fate, refusing even to consider what happened to our country? Why do progressive citizens actively dismiss and even malign a small group of courageous, devoted people working day and night on their behalf to uncover, calculate, analyze, and evaluate the extensive, varied forms of criminal sabotage that undermined their democracy? How are Americans becoming complacent with escalating fraudulent activity? In other words, how do so many people live with the knowledge that they have been tricked before, were just tricked again "and then submit to life under the power of those who tricked them"
Why were hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians out for days in the freezing cold, refusing to accept fraud, while Americans are helplessly colluding with forces of domination Granted, we face a conspiracy of silence in the media, a propaganda campaign discrediting exit polls (which are accurate in counties with paper trails and other countries), and a dismissal of those who challenge the vote as nuts, sore losers and "conspiracy theorists." Censorship, brainwashing and intimidation create an environment of passivity and fear in subtle yet powerful ways that keep the system going with the complicity of those who have been robbed.
We must wonder what is going on in the collective psyche that allows the systematic and progressive usurpation of power.
The Dance of Domination
The psychology of electoral domination has two parts what is being done to people and how they allow it.
Psychological techniques, used deliberately, allow many tricks to go unnoticed and unchallenged. For example, "mystification" is a plausible misrepresentation of reality in which forms of exploitation are presented as forms of benevolence. Like magic and the use of distraction, the issue of voting reform was manipulated and misrepresented, so people felt calmed by the illusion that the problems are being corrected. In fact, the exact opposite is true. Elements of the Help America Vote Act, HAVA (a name as Orwellian as the Clear Skies Initiative, more accurately should be called "Hide America’s Voting Anomalies"), includes intrusive identity checks, the introduction of the "provisional ballot" most of which were not counted, and the use of electronic voting machines. Each of these was brilliantly misused for the opposite intention to corrupt and deny votes to Kerry in ways people wouldn’t notice.
The subterfuge was successfully accomplished with use of censorship, illusion, distortion, brainwashing, propaganda, misinformation, disinformation, mystification, intimidation, shaming, and domination. As Bush might say, it was a catastrophic success.
These techniques combine to form something like a collective hypnotic induction, which creates an illusion of a consensus that cannot be challenged. Few have the insight, training or tools to see through the manipulation. Even fewer have the courage to take on the challenge. For many, responses to domination may include learned helplessness, psychic numbing, fear, cowardice, conformity, denial, cognitive laziness, disbelief, avoidance, and submission to authority. These items are inter-related and the lists are not exhaustive.
Before the psychological explanations, it is necessary to acknowledge a basic factor: the overwhelming ignorance of the facts that most Americans have(though subliminal awareness and lack of desire to know the facts can exacerbate this). Of course if the facts were accurately reported in the mainstream media, the collective psychological climate would be conducive to a healthier public response. People accept fraud for reasons which may be conscious or unconscious. Some of the ways that they do this are described below.
Confusing Outcome with Process
Many don’t want to deal with the corruption because they believe that challenging fraud won’t change the outcome, so there’s no point. This might be a self-fulfilling prophecy. It represents a kind of immature, black-and-white thinking, as the outcome is a separate issue from the process. Even if it doesn’t affect the outcome, voter suppression is criminal.
Paradoxically, refusal to examine the process prevents discovery, which might change the outcome. The Ohio vote challenge required two-hour debates in the House and Senate. Most Democrats who supported the challenge, emphatically stated that they didn?t expect it to change the outcome, as if they were intimidated into making that point first or they would be ridiculed and dismissed. Most Republicans ignored their actual words and made emotional, even hysterical accusations of them not accepting the outcome, being sore losers, and worse. Republicans ignored the issue of voter suppression and praised Kerry highly for not making a big deal out of this.
Numbers, Imagery and Perceptions
People believe that Bush won by 3,500,000 votes?a margin too large to challenge, compared to Gore?s 500,000. They are not aware of the long list of dirty tricks, and knowing of one or two, don?t believe they can add up to 3,500,000. To bring the popular vote to a tie, it only has to add up to half that, 1,750,000, or an average of 35,000 votes per state, Correcting for Ohio?s fraud could change the electoral vote. People may believe subliminally that even if Ohio went to Kerry, the difference in the popular vote is too great. The report of the Conyers Committee may be the best single summary that we have at this time to suggest estimates of the numbers affected.
Discomfort with Numbers
The best evidence for fraud in the 2004 election is statistical, according to Josh Mitteldorf of Temple University’s Statistics Department. Many are uncomfortable with numerical and statistical science that quantifies judgments about likelihood. For example, statistician Dr. Steve Friedman of University of Pennsylvania, and graduate of MIT found that the discrepancy between exit polls and the actual vote count in each of three states, Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania, is 1 in 1,000,000, but the likelihood of all three states being discrepant in the same direction is 1 in 250,000,000. What people heard in the news was a smear campaign invalidating the credibility of exit polls, even though they are considered highly accurate, are used in many countries as indicators of fraud, and that exit polls in counties with a paper trail matched the official vote count, and in counties where there was no paper trail and evidence of computer irregularities, the official count was different than the exit polls and always favored Bush. They even made up fake reasons for this discrepancy regarding response bias which did not exist where there were paper trails.
Disbelief
Many people don’t believe the allegations of fraud because they didn’t read about it in the New York Times or hear it on CNN. (The only mainstream media to report it was Keith Olberman on Countdown, MSNBC.) We might wonder about the media censorship on this story and intentions to promote disbelief in the populous, in addition to ignorance.
Conformity and Herd Mentality
Because of the media blackout, ignorance, and emotional tone of reporting, Americans have a false perception of consensus about objective reality. The majority conforms to this misperception and most do not have the psychological make-up to challenge the status quo. The few that are courageously addressing this are not heard, or else they are severely shamed, ridiculed and viciously accused of causing problems. Thus, even the thought of questioning is suppressed.
Learned Helplessness
Psychologist Martin Seligman?s theory of learned helplessness explains how when one?s repeated actions have no effect, people learn that what they do doesn?t make a difference and give up, even in situations where they can potentially make a difference. People worked hard on this election and believe that they lost. They are burned out. They feel all their hard work, time, energy and money didn?t help so they don?t want to deal with it. Learned helplessness is also associated with elevation of levels of cortisol and immune suppression?suggesting it is ultimately not adaptive or healthy to give up. Conversely, taking action in the face of injustice is a sign of health, enhanced immune response and can be an antidote to depression.
Cowardice
It is reasonable to fear sticking one’s neck out and challenging the powers that be. There may be legitimate reasons to be afraid of individual action, but this becomes part of the problem and rewards domination. As long as people remain silent and isolated from one another, we don?t realize the safety implicit in concerted collective action. The safety in numbers can reduce fear.
Denial and Psychic Numbing
We are comforted with the belief that our leaders are good people who are protecting us. Many decent, well-meaning people believe the best about our system of government and democracy and can’t believe that corruption is going on. It is frightening, unsettling, and intolerable for many Americans to question these core beliefs about our leaders and to accept the reality of extensive fraud. Also, ignorance is bliss, but for the moment, and knowledge implies responsibility, which may be feared and avoided.
Denial and numbing "not knowing and not feeling" protect us from this painful awareness in the present, but they cannot protect us from the real effects of these hidden realities which render us vulnerable to increasing domination and danger in the long term.
If one is in an impossible situation, these habits serve as survival mechanisms to avoid the pain of awareness. However, if one can do something to make a difference, then psychic numbing and denial are maladaptive.
Submission to Authority
The thought of challenging powerful, dominating authority with the prospect of losing is overwhelming. Increasing authoritarianism reinforces this dynamic in gradual, subtle ways. Some may also be afraid of challenging a president during a war and falsely believe it will harm national security.
Political Egocentrism
Many feel that there is no action that they can personally take on this level. It is too big for them, so they don’t even seek out information or support or value the work that others are doing on their behalf.
Avoidance and Compartmentalization
People want to retreat, to focus on their own survival, family, daily life and pleasure, which are manageable. They are less focused on the scary bigger picture. This is completely understandable and even enviable. Furthermore, those struggling with high unemployment, lower wages, and other hardships created by the Bush administration are too preoccupied with their survival issues to pay attention to politics. In this way, disempowerment of certain segments of the population works to the administration’s advantage.
Evolution, Adaptation and Survival
All of these reactions are understandable, but all are part of the problem. In the short run, they may minimize pain, but in the long run they are counterproductive and serve to magnify and multiply problems that are not being faced. Such avoidance mechanisms are not adaptive, as they play into the game of the destructive forces, allowing them to dominate. The continuation of the processes of systematic domination requires the ignorance, passivity and complicity of the majority of decent people, including the millions who supported Kerry. These people are colluding with their own domination.
The Courageous Minority
The reactions listed above are completely natural. Carl Jung said that consciousness is a work against nature. To go against the collective tide of ignorance, conformity and cowardice is a work against nature taken on by the courageous few. This collective, archetypal drama described by Jung was popularized by Joseph Campbell in The Hero’s Journey. The Hero is the one who is willing to take on challenges that most people fear. According to Jung, the hero archetype represents the progressive force in society.
The people I have witnessed working intensely to investigate and challenge voter fraud, have a particular psychological profile. They are courageous and willing to face pain and fear. They call up their strength to challenge authority, as our lives, our freedom and democracy depend on it. They are unable to deny what is going on or remain silent. They are the heroes, in our mythical, archetypal Hero?s journey, willing to face the dragons who are guarding our ?National Treasure.?
They are acknowledged in a piece by William Rivers Pitt called ?Heroes? on Truthout.org. Pitt quotes Bob Dylan: "I think of a hero as someone who understands the degree of responsibility that comes with his freedom."
Only by facing the pain can we transcend it. Consciousness is the first step. Action is an antidote to depression. It would be a sign of health, freedom, and conscious evolution if more people could muster up the courage to face the painful truth of what is happening in our country and support the great work of those courageous souls who are not nuts or conspiracy theorists, but evolved, conscious, healthy leaders taking personal risks and sacrifices to elevate our democracy, restore our integrity and ultimately to increase our security on the world stage if we let them.
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Some Links for Detailed Accounts of Voter Fraud
For a proper psychological understanding of suppression, it is necessary to recognize the quantity and quality of information being suppressed. The extent of fraud and ignorance of it are mind-boggling. Below are some links with detailed information.
Links for detailed information about voter fraud
http://www.auditthevote.org/briefing.jsp
A Guide to Ohio and New Mexico Recounts: Statistical Anomalies and Evidence of Voting Machine Malfunction and Fraud in the 2004 Presidential Election January 5, 2005
By: Audit the Vote and Help America Recount
http://www.helpamericarecount.org/election.html
Analysis of 2004 Election Irregularities
http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/123004B.shtml
TV Networks Officially Refuse to Release Exit Poll Raw Data
By Gary Beckwith, The Columbus Free Press, 22 December 2004
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0103-32.htm
Thom Hartmann in ?Dialing for Democracy?Now Is Critical January 3, 2005, CommonDreams.org
http://nightweed.com/usavotefacts.html
20 Amazing Facts About Voting in the USA
http://www.votersunite.org/info/mapflyer2004.htm
Partial list of incidents reported in the news
http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2005/1065
by Bob Fitrakis, Steve Rosenfeld and Harvey Wasserman
Forum posts
16 April 2005, 15:05
The links are not set up correctly on this post.
For correct link set up click to this site.
(Repeat of article)
Election results - psychological reasons
18 April 2005, 21:08
What a bunch of sour grapes.
16 April 2005, 17:25
Terrific article. You hit the nail on the head repeatedly. It can be rationalized that the prospect of four more years of the fascist style of governance of George W. Bush is preferable to uncovering any truths surrounding voter fraud in "the land of the free and the home of the brave". So we cose our eyes to the truth and pretend we are the democracy we grew up believing in and not the democracy as an ideology strived for but unachieved.
Will Fields
So, Hamilton , MA
17 April 2005, 04:03
Great article. Many of us have known from day one that the election was stolen. The fact that two Republican brothers owned 80% of the voting machines with secret source software, easily hacked, was in itself a crime. Many of us have yelled, protested, written letters, called our representatives in Congress, donated money to the lawyers investigating the Ohio fraud, and more. America is a big place, so even though there were marches on Washington and other cities all over America, there was virtually no news coverage. Granted, there could have been more people involved in the protests, but I still doubt there would have been media coverage since our news has now been compromised by the right wing corporate media. But I believe the most significant obstacle to the silence of the scams was that John Kerry conceded so quickly. If he had had the courage to truly stay in the game, to make sure "all votes were counted, and all the votes would count," then I believe there would have been a proper investigation, even against protests and obstruction by the Bush administration. The tragedy of two stolen presidential elections in a row is that we now have American soldiers dying in a war based on lies; innocent men, women and children dying in a war based on lies; innocent people being tortured to death by our own government; the disrespect of virtually the entire world; a social and economic class war of monumental proportions; a dangerous fundamentalist religious zealotry taking over the government and our lives; and on and on. These are truly dark times in America.
17 April 2005, 09:10
You, sir, are a fool!!
17 April 2005, 07:07
The U.S. culture is materially based on corporate exploitation of the world and the corporate media propaganda is very well regulated and justifies the new empire’s domination and conspicuous consumption. Sponsors and broadcastors, as well as business leaders are one in the same, in terms of their best interests. Convincing the population that what is good for Corporate America is good for the people of America is what Americans have believed for generations and now the opposite is true.
Like a disease the infection has reached a very toxic stage to democracy. There is profit in manufacturing voting systems, counting votes, and businesses that support legislators, and elected officials are directly shaping government and elections. The individual is easily persuaded to agree with the "wisdom" of big money and powerful corporations’ advertisement campaigns, so they remain sheep bleeting and moving and thinking in unison, as herded or directed to. More and more individuals are breaking free from the masses and traditional "wisdom" because they become alienated and kept at arms length by the infrastructures in various institutions, such as religion, government, education, and families. The same institutions that lock others inside as those that are accepted. Division and cultism dominate American culture and politics today. The country is going through another civil rights period with a growing underground and dislike for the status quo that dominates the government, media, and culture. Some are content, while others are feeling like another information based revolution is in the air.
The U.S. is the joke of the world, in terms of democracy.
Civil rights begins with real voting rights, and without voting rights we have no way to protect the Bill of Rights.
20 April 2005, 14:51
"Civil rights begins with real voting rights, and without voting rights we have no way to protect the Bill of Rights."
There’s always the Second Amendment—the right that protects all of the others. But most people on this site tend to pretend the Second Amendment doesn’t exist, so I guess that’s not an option. (I’m making a general observation—in order to advocate such dire action, I would have to accept your conspiracy theory, not the obvious truth that Kerry simply lost a close election.)
17 April 2005, 07:20
Exactly. To have the courage to face the beast we must be able to understand, accept and transcend our own personal fears.
17 April 2005, 21:36
This is incredibly well written.
This part might be the most important..."Learned helplessness is also associated with elevation of levels of cortisol and immune suppression?suggesting it is ultimately not adaptive or healthy to give up. Conversely, taking action in the face of injustice is a sign of health, enhanced immune response and can be an antidote to depression."
Do you know anyone who is sick? How can anyone in America not be sickened by current events? Passionate activism is the cure. Our nation is sick and taking collective action is the only thing that will heal it.
WE are not helpless. The powers that be want us to give up hope. There are hired disinformationalists sent around the net specifically to break people’s hope. ’It’s always been this way. It sucks. They have all the power. We can’t do anything. We’re screwed, oh well’
We can break the chains of apathy, disbelief and denial. People have the power! And I do believe we have critical mass, an irate tireless minority that will not give up until the truth comes out.
‘You shall know the truth and the truth will set you free.’
19 April 2005, 00:12
>Why do progressive citizens actively dismiss and even malign a small group of courageous, >devoted people working day and night on their behalf to uncover, calculate, analyze, and >evaluate the extensive, varied forms of criminal sabotage that undermined their democracy?
For the same reason the American public rejected fears of secret UN black helicopters tooling around the Midwest in the 1990s: because the "small group" you describe is a pack of conspiracy-peddling kooks, that’s why.
By helping to run down our democracy, you contribute to the Big Lie and damage the democracy you claim to want to protect. Night is day, black is white, a mealy-mouthed humbug who is completely devoid of personality lost the election to a likeable incumbent. (Not likeable to you, but to most, just like Clinton was.)
If you drive across the US even today, you’ll see a pretty even split between Bush and Kerry bumper stickers. That’s a lot more accurate than loaded exit polls that people like me intentionally sabotage when polled, anyway. (None of their business, I figure.)
You can spread all of the tortured psycho-babble you want. The answer is pretty straightforward. The election had the usual spotty localized fraud, but it wasn’t enough to throw it either way.
You just can’t stand it that you were beaten by a man you consider an idiot. That’s really it, isn’t it?
You may now return to your regularly-scheduled program. Have fun in Wonderland. Don’t forget to pop out of your hole in ’08 to see if you can see your shadow.
11 May 2005, 20:31
If you look at the facts, particularly in Ohio, there are certainly enough questions and anomalies — regarding both the conduct of the election and the vote count — to justify a thorough unofficial investigation by the news media as well as official investigations by the proper authorities. Certain specific incidents — e.g., the lockdown of the vote count in one Southern Ohio county which officials claimed was based on a (non-existent) warning from the FBI of a terrorist threat — so obviously give the appearance of impropriety that it’s hard to imagine anyone making a reasonable argument that they DON’T deserve investigation.
If there was nothing fishy about the election, why has there been so much resistance to the few inquiries — by Rep John Conyers and others — which have been launched? Why has Ohio Secretary of State Ken Blackwell been so uncooperative and indeed obstructionist? One would think he’d be eager to have any lingering doubts erased and his name unambiguously cleared by investigators. Instead, his hostile reaction (some might say over-reaction) has exactly resembled what one might expect from someone with something to hide.
Leaving aside the traditional, almost institutionalized disenfranchisement of black (and in the Southwest, Latino) voters which occurs in every election (I believe that, nationwide, almost 50% of the eight million or so ballots declared "spoiled" and thus never counted were cast by African-Americans), I think there’s very little doubt that Bush legitimately (as far as the mechanics of the actual election are concerned) won the popular vote in 2004. Therefore his election, however flawed, can’t be considered a denial of the will of the American people, as it arguably was in 2000, but it will now probably never be known whether the majority of Ohioans who set out to vote on election day (and were legally entitled to do so) — in other words, those who actually voted plus those who were prevented from voting through no fault of their own by impossibly long lines, deliberately planned confusion, planted misinformation, etc. — favored Bush or Kerry, or even whether the ballots actually, legally cast favored Bush or Kerry, or whether (and if so on how great a scale, and by whom) vote totals were deliberately manipulated.
However, I just don’t see how you could look at ALL the anomalies and allegations and unexplained goings on which have surfaced in connection with the election in Ohio, Pennsylvania and elsewhere and claim with a straight face that there are no grounds for an investigation. In fact, to even be able to hold an intelligent opinion concerning the argument over the signficance of the discrepancy between exit poll data and the reported vote count, you would need to be a trained statistician.
It’s interesting that the current administration — by any objective standard the most secretive in recent history — and their Republican allies in Congress — who like to pass mystery bills in the middle of the night with a minimum of debate — always oppose ANY independent investigation into ANYTHING they’re involved in. They resisted the 9/11 Commission at every turn; they’ve tried to keep the Red Cross from investigating conditions at Guantanamo; just a week or so ago they threw UN human rights monitors out of Afghanistan; Congress tried to dismantle the House Ethics Committee to prevent any further examination of Tom DeLay’s allegedly shady dealings; the military has deliberately made life difficult for independent jouralists in Iraq and has raised no objection to the new Iraqi government’s arrest of a number of journalists; the Vice-President just won a case allowing him to keep secret the names of those who advised on his energy plan; and so on... Why, you’d almost think they had something to hide!