Florida Foul-Up Focuses Attention on
America's Huge but Hidden Minority: The Easily
Confused
By Steve Sailer
Having recently published a five part series
in VDARE on the plight of the intellectually
challenged in modern America [http://www.vdare.com/iq.htm],
I was pleased that so many Al Gore supporters in
Florida's Palm Beach County have chosen to make
themselves the poster children for the easily
confused. By their willingness to go on national
television and proclaim their failure to
understand that an arrow pointing from Al Gore's
name to a punch hole means that they should have
punched that hole ... well, I never expected my
argument to get that much free publicity. [For a
picture of the baffling ballot, see http://election.voter.com/f/326/2049/10m/www.voter.com
/home/news/article/0,1175,2-15534-,00.html.]
As IQ researcher Linda Gottfredson has
pointed out, "Life is an IQ test."
Performance on practically every task that has
ever been studied is positively correlated with
IQ. Thus, it's by no means surprising how much
trouble the elderly and the permanently dim
experience trying to decipher a new ballot
design, no matter how simple.
Of course, stupidity is not confined to Gore
supporters. While 19,000 ballots were screwed-up
in Gore-loving Palm Beach County, the heavily
Republican voters of Florida's Duval County
botched 22,000 ballots - an astounding 8% of the
county's total.
Democrats in Palm Beach complain that it was
confusing to have the Presidential candidates
names printed on both the left and right pages
of the now-notorious "butterfly
ballot." In Duval, however, election
officials chose the other possible layout. They
put the names of the candidate just on the left
hand page. They couldn't squeeze all ten
candidates onto just one page, so they printed,
"Continued on the next page" at the
bottom, and listed the rest of the candidates on
a second left hand page. A remarkable fraction
of Duval voters proceeded to vote for one
Presidential candidate from each page! [http://www.times-union.com/tu-online/stories/111100/met_4586641.html]
No doubt in the rest of Florida, tens of
thousands of other voters managed to make a hash
of their ballots too. So, there is no reason to
assume that the people of Florida
"actually" wanted to elect Gore. No,
the only thing unique about Palm Beach is the
culture of kvetch and victimism that encourages
the residents to assume that their mistakes are
not their own fault and then loudly proclaim
that they should get a second try to do it
right. Can you imagine some respectable Japanese
gentleman from Kyoto going on TV to say that his
ineptness in the voting booth cost his party
control of the Diet? If he did, he'd probably
commit seppuku immediately afterward.
A high proportion of spoiled ballots in
African American precincts have long been the
bane of black candidates. Jesse Jackson used to
complain during his runs at the Democratic
nomination about how many of his supporters'
ballots were disqualified.
Jews, of course, tend to perform well above
average at deciphering complexity. But age takes
a terrible toll on problem solving ability.
VDARE contributor Daniel Seligman reported on
this in his A Question of Intelligence. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0806515074/vdare.
IQ test scores are adjusted for age. On the
popular Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, a
25-year-old's raw score of 114 and a
60-year-old's raw score of 93 are equivalized to
equal 100. Yet, the real slippage tends to take
place after age 65.
"Crystallized Intelligence" remains
fairly strong, though. Short of senility, for
example, the old don't lose much of their
vocabulary. Most of the deterioration is in
"fluid intelligence," the kind you
need to solve new problems. Seligman wrote,
"Research performed over several
generations tells us that elderly people have
more difficulty than young adults in following
instructions about matters not familiar to
them."
For example, when I was a personal computer
technician at age 26, I enjoyed few things more
than reading a new computer manual from cover to
cover. By age 30, however, I had to seek refuge
in the less rigorous field of corporate
strategy. Today, at 41, my brainpower has so
diminished that I must eke out my living as a
pundit. (Fortunately, the competition has gotten
increasingly less formidable with each career
change.)
This problem isn't going away. In 2011, the
first wave of Baby Boomers hits 65. As with
everything that has ever personally confronted
my immensely tiresome generation, this issue
will suddenly become the Biggest Crisis in the
History of America.
But there's no moral reason for waiting until
then to start thinking about how to help our
cerebrally limited fellow citizens. There are
tens of millions of Americans out there who were
born as clueless as those Palm Beach retirees
took 80 years to become. As the Palm Beach /
Duval examples show, it will never be easy to
make things easier for the unintelligent. But
it's time we at least thought about it. And the
single most obvious way to help our fellow
Americans who lost out in the genetic IQ lottery
is to not import unskilled immigrants to compete
against them and drive down their wages.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
November 14, 2000