Cruz resorts to Shaming

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I just saw this! Can't believe any candidate would do this. He's lost Iowa for sure now, maybe New Hampshire and South Carolina too.

Hopefully someone will post the article and pictures. I can't, on my iPad.
 

Buick Electra

TB2K Girls with Guns
WOW! :eek: I have to say I've NEVER seen a candidate set out to PISS OFF a state 2 days before the state's elections. Both Rubio and Cruz seem to be
Burning.gif


Well it's *confirmed* and it goes even deeper.

Unbelievable – Ted Cruz Campaign Sends Out Personal “Shaming Letters” To Iowa Voters…
Posted on January 30, 2016 by sundance


update-1 It has now been confirmed – The photograph of Ted Cruz campaign shaming letters is legit (see below). The letters are officially from the Ted Cruz campaign.

Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler confirmed to IJ Review that the mailer was theirs in a phone call Friday evening, saying that the targeting had been “very narrow, but the caucuses are important and we want people who haven’t voted before to vote.” (link)


The personalized letters target individual Iowa voters and identifies them as having failed to vote in prior elections. They are admonished and then encouraged to vote this year. In addition the letters identify the neighbors of the voter, and provides their voting history.

The text reads:
“You are receiving this election notice because of low expected voter turnout in your area. Your individual voting history as well as your neighbors’ are public record. Their scores are published below, and many of them will see your score as well. CAUCUS ON MONDAY TO IMPROVE YOUR SCORE and please encourage your neighbors to caucus as well. A follow-up notice may be issued following Monday’s caucuses”.


ted-cruz-shaming-campaign-3.jpg


In an effort to shame the recipient, the notice also informs the targeted voter their neighbors have also been notified of the recipients poor voting record.

How the Cruz Team would think a public shaming campaign is a good idea is just staggeringly unbelievable.

The campaign scheme was exposed via Twitter where “Tom Hinkeldy, a resident of Alta, Iowa, tweeted a photo (which was later deleted because it included his personal address) on Friday evening of a mailer Sen. Ted Cruz’s campaign sent addressed to his wife, Steffany” –link–

Word spread rapidly.
http://theconservativetreehouse.com...-out-personal-shaming-letters-to-iowa-voters/

DUDE!!! :screw: But HOW did Cruz know who to send these letters to, (which I'm not really surprised at)? Here ya go...(posted for fair use) OH, and NOTE THE DATE OF THE ARTICLE!

Ted Cruz using firm that harvested data on millions of unwitting Facebook users
Harry Davies
Friday 11 December 2015 17.22 EST

Exclusive: Documents reveal donor-funded US startup embedded in Republican’s campaign paid UK university academics to collect psychological profiles on potential voters

Ted Cruz’s presidential campaign is using psychological data based on research spanning tens of millions of Facebook users, harvested largely without their permission, to boost his surging White House run and gain an edge over Donald Trump and other Republican rivals, the Guardian can reveal.

A little-known data company, now embedded within Cruz’s campaign and indirectly financed by his primary billionaire benefactor, paid researchers at Cambridge University to gather detailed psychological profiles about the US electorate using a massive pool of mainly unwitting US Facebook users built with an online survey.

As part of an aggressive new voter-targeting operation, Cambridge Analytica – financially supported by reclusive hedge fund magnate and leading Republican donor Robert Mercer – is now using so-called “psychographic profiles” of US citizens in order to help win Cruz votes, despite earlier concerns and red flags from potential survey-takers.

Documents seen by the Guardian have uncovered longstanding ethical and privacy issues about the way academics hoovered up personal data by accessing a vast set of US Facebook profiles, in order to build sophisticated models of users’ personalities without their knowledge.

It means you have a wild west, where the campaigns can do whatever they want and get away with it
Christopher Soghoian, ACLU

In the race to advance data-driven electioneering strategies pioneered by successive Obama campaigns, Cruz has turned to Cambridge Analytica for its unparalleled offering of psychological data based on a treasure trove of Facebook “likes”, allowing it to match individuals’ traits with existing voter datasets, such as who owned a gun.

Analysis of Federal Election Commission (FEC) filings shows Cruz’s campaign has paid Cambridge Analytica at least $750,000 this year. The “behavioural microtargeting” company has also received around $2.5m over the past two years from conservative Super Pacs to which Mercer or members of his family have donated.
Ronald Reagan and ... Barack Obama? Ted Cruz reveals presidential role models
Read more

In an interview with the Guardian last month, Cruz said his funding and outreach apparatus “is very much the Obama model – a data-driven, grassroots-driven campaign – and it is a reason why our campaign is steadily gathering strength”.

Cruz is increasingly seen as a leading Republican contender, uniting factions within the party beyond his evangelical and Tea Party base. In Iowa – the first state to vote in the presidential primary, in less than two months – the outspoken Texas senator dethroned Trump in a poll for the first time this week as the mogul became ensnared in yet more controversy.

Cambridge Analytica has also worked with the Republican candidate Ben Carson, receiving $220,000 from his campaign earlier this year. But the company is more closely involved in Cruz’s presidential bid, with a team of its data scientists currently working at Cruz campaign headquarters in Houston.

Having donated $11m to the main pro-Cruz Super Pac, Keep the Promise I, Mercer is Cruz’s top financier – and the largest individual donor to Super Pacs or outside groups during the presidential election cycle thus far, according to data compiled by the political transparency website Open Secrets.

Mercer’s connections to both the Cruz campaign and the data firm that is apparently helping to power the senator’s advantages were previously reported by Politico and Bloomberg. But political strategists and privacy advocates agreed that Mercer’s parallel funding channels, combined with concerns over the surreptitious, commodified Facebook data – reported here for the first time – represented an intensified collision of billionaire financing and digital targeting on the campaign trail.

“If people begin to be turned off by Trump, the Cruz campaign will probably have a better strategic understanding of the implications and how to capitalize upon them,” said Bud Jackson, a Democratic specialist in digital grassroots campaigning, when asked to review the relationships. “Where a candidate’s campaign may be afraid to go outside the boundaries of ethical behaviour because of a potential public backlash, an outside group may be less afraid.”

In an interview, Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler said the campaign had contracted Cambridge Analytica “because they’re a market leader and best in the field” but that officials had “done our due diligence”.

[THEY HAVE SOME INTERESTING GRAPHICS OVER THERE THAT WON'T COPY OVER HERE BUT YOU REALLY NEED TO SEE]

Kogan assured the MTurk users their Facebook data would “only be used for research purposes” and remain “anonymous and safe”.

However, the Facebook data was then used to generate sophisticated models of each of their personalities using the so-called “big five” personality traits and characteristics – openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism (known as the OCEAN scale).

By summer 2014, Kogan’s company had created an expansive and powerful dataset. His business partner boasted on LinkedIn that their private outfit, Global Science Research (GSR), “owns a massive data pool of 40+ million individuals across the United States – for each of whom we have generated detailed characteristic and trait profiles”.

Documents show SCL agreed to a contract with GSR, whereby it would pay its data collection costs in order to improve “match rates” against SCL’s existing datasets or to enhance GSR’s algorithm’s “national capacity to profile capacity of American citizens”.

In an email, Kogan said he was unable to explain in detail where all the data came from, as he was restricted by various confidentiality agreements. He said SCL is no longer a client.

He said that while GSR often used MTurk for data collection, it “never collected more than a couple thousand responses on MTurk for any one project, or even across all projects for a single client – the vast majority of our MTurk data collection as a company is in the form of surveys only”. He said GSR stores Facebook data anonymously.

Kogan explained that separate from his university role, his private company undertook various commercial ventures relating to data analysis. He said that when GSR collect Facebook data, the terms detail the use that information collected will be put to and make clear to participants that they are giving GSR full permission to use the data and user contribution for any purpose.

He said Cambridge University had “no knowledge of the clients or projects GSR had worked on” and that GSR has never used any data collected as part of his university activities.

‘Packaging voters like they’re consumers’

Today, Cambridge Analytica’s central offering to US politicians is to enable them to use the OCEAN scale in shaping highly targeted campaign messages. This allows candidates like Cruz to campaign on specific issues, but communicate them in multiple ways to different audiences depending on the personal information the company holds about them.

As the company’s CEO, Alexander Nix, explains in a promotional video: “The more you know about someone, the more you can align a campaign with their requirements or their wants and needs.” He did not respond to a request for comment.

Michael Zimmer, an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, where he specialises in privacy and internet ethics, described this as a “particularly problematic” kind of voter targeting that raised broader concerns in the US about “packaging voters like they’re consumers”.

“It’s one thing for a marketer to try to predict if people like Coke or Pepsi,” he said, “but it’s another thing for them to predict things that are much more central to our identity and what’s more personal in how I interact with the world in terms of social and cultural issues.”

Prior to its relationship with Cruz, Cambridge Analytica worked with a handful of 2014 midterm candidates, according to FEC filings. The firm also secured hundreds of thousands of dollars of business with John Bolton’s Super Pac, formed by the hawkish former UN ambassador to support conservative candidates campaigning on national security issues.

Ahead of the midterms, Cambridge Analytica reportedly developed a series of TV ads for candidates supported by Bolton, each aimed at different personality types and aired at times when viewers with personalities it aimed to reach were most likely to be watching.

Last week, the Cruz campaign launched a combative TV ad timed to air during a major college football game in Iowa. In the 30-second ad, Cruz vows: “We’ll rebuild our military, we’ll kill the terrorists and every Islamic militant will know – if you wage jihad against us, you’re signing your death warrant.”

Tyler, the Cruz spokesman, said Cambridge Analytica did not work on television advertising for the campaign. “They’re helping with online targeting and messaging, and that’s how we find people online,” he said.

It remains unclear when Mercer’s involvement with Cambridge Analytica began, but FEC filings show the company started working with Super Pacs that the secretive conservative donor has backed during the second half of 2014.

On Wednesday in Washington, Cruz was the only member of the Senate armed services committee to skip a hearing on US strategy to combat the Islamic State. Instead, he travelled to attend a fundraising luncheon in New York hosted by the president of Keep the Promise I, the Super Pac funded by Mercer that, one day earlier, had announced a $600,000 digital advertising strategy to be rolled out via social media in early voting states.

A spokesman for Mercer declined to comment for this article.


Additional reporting by Ben Jacobs in Amana, Iowa
http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...ed-cruz-president-campaign-facebook-user-data

Y'all need to view this twitter page. Some here are saying the Rubio camp did this to Cruz. https://twitter.com/rumpfshaker/status/693293747543474176

Lucky me! All I got mailed to me from Trump was a Christmas card. :whistle:
 
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dero50

Veteran Member
Harvesting data on citizens....not much different than what we have in the WH already. Not surprised...it seems to be who he is....scary Count Chocula!
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
Cruz can't possibly be that stupid. Is he trying to torpedo his campaign on purpose or did a staffer think this was smart? Tell you what. I think if I got a letter like that and knew that this candidate was searching for my voting record thereby invading my privacy and my personal business [even if it's a public record] that this candidate would be the last person I would vote for. Matter of fact even if I was apolitical that would probably push me over the edge to actively support his opposition.

funny-fail-pictures1.jpg
 

Silent Knight

Inactive
I'm anxious to see how TB2K's resident Cruz cheerleader spins this one. :whistle: Actually, I expect him to avoid this thread completely. :bhrt:
 

thompson

Certa Bonum Certamen
Cruz can't possibly be that stupid. Is he trying to torpedo his campaign on purpose or did a staffer think this was smart? Tell you what. I think if I got a letter like that and knew that this candidate was searching for my voting record thereby invading my privacy and my personal business [even if it's a public record] that this candidate would be the last person I would vote for. Matter of fact even if I was apolitical that would probably push me over the edge to actively support his opposition.

No kidding.

I want this asshole primaried out of his Senate seat the next election cycle.
 

rlm1966

Veteran Member
Yeah, if I received that in the mail I would definitely go vote. Of course I would vote for someone/anyone other than the ass clown that mailed that to me, but I would definitely go vote. Then I would send a nice note back to them explaining that I appreciated them reminding me to go vote for anyone other than them.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
Haha! You guys are obviously NOT from small town/boondocks U.S.A. Or else you don't vote.

All my neighbors know if I vote or not - every time the polls are open. We still sign a long paper voter's list in our township - managed by one of the township busybodies/election officials at the table where the ballots are handed out. If you haven't signed, you haven't voted - clear to everybody who takes a ballot that day - with our full name and address attached.

Whether it was a smart move to send out such a mailing is another question, but voting information IS public.
 

CTFIREBATTCHIEF

Veteran Member
Damn, who ever thought up the idea to mail out a letter like that, must be dumber than monkey dung! If I EVER got something like that in the mail, I'd be on the way to the closest cruz campaign office, slap it down on the desk of the twit running it and tell em that they just ensured that I'd be an ABC voter! "anybody BUT Cruz"
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
Haha! You guys are obviously NOT from small town/boondocks U.S.A. Or else you don't vote.

All my neighbors know if I vote or not - every time the polls are open. We still sign a long paper voter's list in our township - managed by one of the township busybodies/election officials at the table where the ballots are handed out. If you haven't signed, you haven't voted - clear to everybody who takes a ballot that day - with our full name and address attached.

Whether it was a smart move to send out such a mailing is another question, but voting information IS public.

Not just little towns...

Here in a suburb of CLE we sign just like that, in the book, to pick up our ballot....

THAT I voted is Public Record. HOW is secret (more or less).

Someone needs a new bigger teapot, I think.
 

flame

Senior Member
omg, if I recieved a letter like that I would call the media over and then burn the letter in my bbq on the front lawn. I am beginning to hate politicians with a fiery passion.
 

gunnersmom

Veteran Member
Cruz has been amassing information on voters for a while. This fits in nicely. It's one thing to know something about someone. It's quite another matter to write a letter letting them know you know. He is a creep.
 

Laurane

Canadian Loonie
Not a Cruz fan (though he was Canadian LOL).......

But it is possible that some other candidate with deep pockets or even the RNC elites, had a bunch of envelopes printed up with Cruz' name on them, and mailed them, hoping to get just this kind of reaction.

I don't see Cruz as silly enough to do this. If he doesn't come out with an explanation before the caucus, I guess you guys are all correct.

I see it is now confirmed - you can blame that decision on his Canadian roots.......:p
 
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Illini Warrior

Illini Warrior
who does Cruz think he is? .... he keeps acting like he's the lead candidate - best thing to happen to him is Trump's exit from the last debate ....
 

ParanoidNot

Veteran Member
I don't know if the OP is correct or not, but this thread (and a few of the other recent political threads) reminds me of “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes,” by Mark Twain.

Go look at the photo in the fourth post. Really, all of the people on the list had exactly the same voting history. Exactly, not off by a percent or two? Each at 55%.

Seems unlikely to me. YMMV. This whole story seems off to me, but what do I know.
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
I don't know if the OP is correct or not, but this thread (and a few of the other recent political threads) reminds me of “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes,” by Mark Twain.

Go look at the photo in the fourth post. Really, all of the people on the list had exactly the same voting history. Exactly, not off by a percent or two? Each at 55%.

Seems unlikely to me. YMMV. This whole story seems off to me, but what do I know.

You need to read it a bit closer and follow the link that leads to this page: http://journal.ijreview.com/2016/01...iowan-received-controversial-mailer-ted-cruz/

Read that. Within that story:

Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler confirmed to IJ Review that the mailer was theirs in a phone call Friday evening, saying that the targeting had been “very narrow, but the caucuses are important and we want people who haven’t voted before to vote.”

If you do a google there are over 238,000 hits on this story from different sources. As unbelievable as it may be it appears to be accurate.

Rick Tyler is Cruz's senior communications advisor.
 

thompson

Certa Bonum Certamen
I don't know if the OP is correct or not, but this thread (and a few of the other recent political threads) reminds me of “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes,” by Mark Twain.

Go look at the photo in the fourth post. Really, all of the people on the list had exactly the same voting history. Exactly, not off by a percent or two? Each at 55%.

Seems unlikely to me. YMMV. This whole story seems off to me, but what do I know.

Click on the embedded links

http://theconservativetreehouse.com...-out-personal-shaming-letters-to-iowa-voters/

update_1_gif_w_640.gif


It has now been confirmed – The photograph of Ted Cruz campaign shaming letters is legit (see below). The letters are officially from the Ted Cruz campaign.
Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler confirmed to IJ Review that the mailer was theirs in a phone call Friday evening, saying that the targeting had been “very narrow, but the caucuses are important and we want people who haven’t voted before to vote.” (link)




 

Amazed

Does too have a life!
Laurane

Cruz spokesman Rick Tyler confirmed to IJ Review that the mailer was theirs in a phone call Friday evening, saying that the targeting had been “very narrow, but the caucuses are important and we want people who haven’t voted before to vote.” (link)
 

thompson

Certa Bonum Certamen
Ted Cruz is so concerned about the privacy of ordinary Americans that he just mailed individuals voting records to their neighbors.

— Laughter and Tears (@PoliticalLaughs) January 30, 2016
 

Buick Electra

TB2K Girls with Guns
I don't know if the OP is correct or not, but this thread (and a few of the other recent political threads) reminds me of “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes,” by Mark Twain.

Go look at the photo in the fourth post. Really, all of the people on the list had exactly the same voting history. Exactly, not off by a percent or two? Each at 55%.

Seems unlikely to me. YMMV. This whole story seems off to me, but what do I know.

You need to go to the embedded links in the first OP, labeled as "LINK" and it will show you several people's "report cards" that they received and not all the neighbors %'s are equal.
 

Now-Later

Veteran Member
Ted Cruz is so concerned about the privacy of ordinary Americans that he just mailed individuals voting records to their neighbors.

— Laughter and Tears (@PoliticalLaughs) January 30, 2016

Just what America needs for a president
What's he going to do this year bring up an I spy bill for congress to vote on and make into law
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
WalkNTrot- yes, I AM from "small town" America (not even that... more horses and cows than humans in our township) and we do vote the old fashioned way.

That's NOT THE POINT!!

This is so Big Brotherish, it gives me chills. This MORON (or his staff, and I don't care- clearly, his campaign culture is such that they actually thought this would be approved by him- and maybe it was!) actually believes that people want big government checking up to see if they've been good little citizens, and voted? And then to INCLUDE THE NEIGHBOR'S INFO.. holy cow!! Talk about tone deaf AND stupid!!

Anyone BUT Cruz, indeed.

Summerthyme
 

DannyBoy

Veteran Member
If this turns out to be true, it is pretty crazy... I'm thinking someone on his staff needs to be canned. If he says "and I approved this message", he has just lost thousands...
 

kiwiapsa

Contributing Member
Well, receiving something like this in the mail would expose the real character of the man behind the public image. The most offensive aspect is making public the voting records of my neighbors. I would never, ever consider making an effort to learn of their voting history behind their backs. Using shaming to win votes at any cost has now cost you my vote. This tactic is such a stinking low for any campaign.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I'm not saying it wasn't stupid - time will tell on that one. What is annoying or even scary to individuals still might be highly effective for a campaign. For them, it's not about making friends, it's ONLY about getting votes.

The point is, the parties do take that public info and use it legally (so does the press) a lot more than people realize. Just that it isn't usually done so obviously and in such a "rat out your neighbor" format. But that's exactly where call lists, mail drop lists and canvassing lists come from. They do know and use all this stuff all the time. If you've ever worked a call bank, the list is floating around the table for all to read. I have never seen a letter like this go out before, but have seen party precinct officials with the voter's lists and stats in hand going around neighborhoods doing home visits. A different format, but same end. Individually targeting prospective voters with any and all means possible - sometimes including peer pressure and intimidation.

Politics is a REAL dirty business.
 

curlysue

Tomorrow will come
Thanks Buick for posting the whole article. I am going to have to learn how to do that on a smart phone.
 

fairbanksb

Freedom Isn't Free
I'm not saying it was the right thing to do but looking at the report cards that have been posted let's me see how Obama got elected. If you don't bother to vote then don't complain.
 

thompson

Certa Bonum Certamen
I know I would feel all warm and fuzzy towards a candidate (NOT!) if I had just received a Notice of Voting Violation in my mailbox.

CZ94k4YWAAADk9m.jpg
 

wait-n-see

Veteran Member
I know I would feel all warm and fuzzy towards a candidate (NOT!) if I had just received a Notice of Voting Violation in my mailbox.

Getting this in the mail would energizer me to go and vote for their main competitor.


Imagine what a candidate who does this would do with the power of the presidency in their control? A scary thought indeed.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I know I would feel all warm and fuzzy towards a candidate (NOT!) if I had just received a Notice of Voting Violation in my mailbox.

CZ94k4YWAAADk9m.jpg

Question are they really listing peoples names? IF so could you send this to KCCI CH8 in Des Moines CBS affiliate, Iowans need to see this sh8t and NOW!!!
 

Dosadi

Brown Coat
It would be a cold day in hell when someone who stuck their nose into my business, esp. a career politick, and then sent my private business to my neighbors would get anything beyond me offering to put a boot up his ass for him.

It would sway me to vote against someone I might otherwise have liked.

Some levels of stupid cannot be fixed, this is an example.

sunny beech probably thinks he should be king.
 

Cascadians

Leska Emerald Adams
This long drawn out weird political campaign just keeps getting crazier. Bonkers. They are all so flawed and abjectly pathetic. The whole thing is one huge ball of disgusting.
 
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