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There Was a Huge ‘Mistake' in the 2020 Census… Guess Which Party It Favored? |
2022-06-06 |
![]() Why didn’t the media make a big stink about this story? Maybe it was overshadowed by the recent mass shootings, that’s certainly a possibility, but I have another theory. Here are the states that the Census acknowledged it overcounted: Hawaii, Delaware, Rhode Island, Minnesota, New York, and Massachusetts. Here are the states that the Census acknowledged it undercounted: Texas, Illinois, Florida, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Arkansas. Well, gee, isn’t that interesting. Does it seem like a mere bizarre coincidence that the overcounted states all voted for Biden in 2020, and five of the six undercounted states for Trump in 2020? "Last week’s Census Bureau announcement of serious errors will impact the next decade’s congressional apportionment and delegations, and play a crucial role in the presidential race," explained Kristin Tate at The Hill. "Given the nature of the mistakes, Democrats could hang onto the presidency under particularly controversial circumstances due to publicly-acknowledged errors." The changes will impact national politics in a dramatic fashion. The 2020 census led to significant changes to congressional seats apportioned to states. Texas gained two congressional seats, while North Carolina, Florida, Montana, Colorado and Oregon each gained one. New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and California each lost one seat in Congress. There was significant surprise that population growth winners such as Texas and Florida didn’t gain more seats. With the possible exception of Illinois not losing a seat, the likely effects of an accurate count would have overwhelmingly aided red states. Simply put, the revised figures show that (mostly) red states had even quicker relative population growth compared to the rest of the country — and especially compared to (mostly) blue states. It is entirely possible that undercounted states could have gained at least one seat in Congress, while overcounted states may have lost at least one each. All institutions are completely corrupt at this point. Burn them all down. |
Posted by:DarthVader |
#4 My Fancy Scientific Statistical Model™ shows there are When they started "adjusting" the Census numbers it became a farce. |
Posted by: magpie 2022-06-06 16:31 |
#3 Could easily be done, I live in an apartment and had 4 sent to my mailbox. |
Posted by: Chris 2022-06-06 15:38 |
#2 Going to guess lots of fraudulent census self-reports were sent in, just like mail-in ballots. |
Posted by: M. Murcek 2022-06-06 12:17 |
#1 The article links to the Census Bureau report. It looks like they’re comparing actual counts with self-response rates against what they expect based on computer models. Oddly enough, the South had a lower than expected number of self-responses — I assume that means the number of returned survey forms. PDF —executive summary is on page 8. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2022-06-06 12:06 |