When did who you vote for become more public?

Status
Not open for further replies.

mstateglfr

Well-known member
Feb 24, 2008
13,698
3,619
113
There were almost 0 yard signs in my neighborhood growing up.
Well, I don't know about the 80s because I wouldn't remember one way or the other, but thru the 90s, they just weren't a thing that people put out in large numbers.

Since '04 though?...the increase in yard signs is exponential.


^ just mentioning yard signs because they are distinctly analog and rose in popularity before social media.
 

DesotoCountyDawg

Well-known member
Nov 16, 2005
22,880
10,922
113
There were almost 0 yard signs in my neighborhood growing up.
Well, I don't know about the 80s because I wouldn't remember one way or the other, but thru the 90s, they just weren't a thing that people put out in large numbers.

Since '04 though?...the increase in yard signs is exponential.


^ just mentioning yard signs because they are distinctly analog and rose in popularity before social media.
I’ve never understood the appeal to have 10 Trump yard signs (or any other candidate) in your yard when he’s going to cakewalk Mississippi.
 

mcdawg22

Well-known member
Sep 18, 2004
11,273
5,552
113
I’ve never understood the appeal to have 10 Trump yard signs (or any other candidate) in your yard when he’s going to cakewalk Mississippi.
I never understood the point of having a yard sign period unless you personally know the candidate. Congrats, you chose one of two options. I’m going to have a yard sign that says Tails 2024.
 

drexeldog23

Well-known member
Dec 2, 2022
550
571
93
I never understood the point of having a yard sign period unless you personally know the candidate. Congrats, you chose one of two options. I’m going to have a yard sign that says Tails 2024.
my parents were staunch Republicans but they never had any candidates signs in their yard. my brother ran for Rankin County Alderman in 2018 and they didn't even put his sign in the yard. as far as me personally yall might have noticed im a Republican but i have never had any t-shirts or caps or signs in the yard , but if anyone asked i would not have any problem answering them. Go Pubs!
 

Dawgg

Well-known member
Sep 9, 2012
8,004
6,814
113
There were almost 0 yard signs in my neighborhood growing up.
Well, I don't know about the 80s because I wouldn't remember one way or the other, but thru the 90s, they just weren't a thing that people put out in large numbers.

Since '04 though?...the increase in yard signs is exponential.


^ just mentioning yard signs because they are distinctly analog and rose in popularity before social media.
Yard signs was the measuring stick I was thinking about too. Growing up in North Mississippi, the only signs I really saw in front of homes were local and maybe state races because they actually knew the candidate (or their opponent) personally.

I noticed after I moved to Texas in 2003 that there were a LOT of W Bush signs in my neighbors’ yards and a lot of Perry for Governor in 2006. I didn’t really engage until 2008 when my neighbor and I had almost a friendly competition on Obama vs McCain signs. We lived across the street from each other on corner lots in an older neighborhood, so it was a fun visual since we positioned them similarly and directly across from each other.

For me, it wasn’t necessarily that I thought some rando undecided was going to see my sign and think “huh… ya know… maybe I should vote for Obama” and I knew Obama wasn’t going to win Texas. It was more like a beacon to like-minded folks saying “hey, I know you’re a blue dot in a deeply red sea, but you’re not alone. There are a few of us here in Ellis County.”

But I do think the “my politics is my identity” stuff really took off with message boards, but those were still largely powered by people using pseudonyms. Once social media took off and people started attaching their real names to their political leanings, it became a lot of people’s defining characteristic, like their familial status, favorite sports teams, or religion.

We’ve also had a “cult of personality” in 4 of the last 5 races. It was Obama (and to a lesser extent Palin) in 2008 and Trump in 2016, 2020, & 2024. People were coming out of the woodwork to specifically vote for or against those candidates, not necessarily their party or a specific policy.
 
Last edited:

mcdawg22

Well-known member
Sep 18, 2004
11,273
5,552
113
my parents were staunch Republicans but they never had any candidates signs in their yard. my brother ran for Rankin County Alderman in 2018 and they didn't even put his sign in the yard. as far as me personally yall might have noticed im a Republican but i have never had any t-shirts or caps or signs in the yard , but if anyone asked i would not have any problem answering them. Go Pubs!
And that’s fine by all means. The other side is I think some people actually believe their signs will somehow affect the way others will vote. Gary, you can’t keep your crabgrass under control do you think we should listen to you on how to curb inflation?
 

Fritz!

Active member
Oct 16, 2014
415
306
63
I live in The Fondren, there’s a LOT of Harris/Walz signs. A lot of them hand made on State St. I wouldn’t put a sign in my in in for ANYBODY, mostly because my wife won’t let me, partially because we’re trying to sell the house (only to move a half mile away) and basically because I like my neighbors (for the most part). I’ve thought of the addendums I could have added to the Harris signs, but I couldn’t do it. I wouldn’t want anyone screwing with my stuff,so I don’t want to screw with anyone else’s stuff. Perhaps I’m more of a Libertarian **
 

mstateglfr

Well-known member
Feb 24, 2008
13,698
3,619
113
Yard signs was the measuring stick I was thinking about too. Growing up in North Mississippi, the only signs I really saw in front of homes were local and maybe state races because they actually knew the candidate (or their opponent) personally.

I noticed after I moved to Texas in 2003 that there were a LOT of W Bush signs in my neighbors’ yards and a lot of Perry for Governor in 2006. I didn’t really engage until 2008 when my neighbor and I had almost a friendly competition on Obama vs McCain signs. We lived across the street from each other on corner lots in an older neighborhood, so it was a fun visual since we positioned them similarly and directly across from each other.

For me, it wasn’t necessarily that I thought some rando undecided was going to see my sign and think “huh… ya know… maybe I should vote for Obama” and I knew Obama wasn’t going to win Texas. It was more like a beacon to like-minded folks saying “hey, I know you’re a blue dot in a deeply red sea, but you’re not alone. There are a few of us here in Ellis County.”

But I do think the “my politics is my identity” stuff really took off with message boards, but those were still largely powered by people using pseudonyms. Once social media took off and people started attaching their real names to their political leanings, it became a lot of people’s defining characteristic, like their familial status, favorite sports teams, or religion.

We’ve also had a “cult of personality” in 4 of the last 5 races. It was Obama (and to a lesser extent Palin) in 2008 and Trump in 2016, 2020, & 2024. People were coming out of the woodwork to specifically vote for or against those candidates, not necessarily their party or a specific policy.
What we did have a ton of in the 90s were political bumper stickers.

Dole Kemp '96!
 

MSUDC11-2.0

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
7,096
10,476
113
I think some of it is we’ve become a nation of candidate worshippers. Both sides. One side views their candidate as a savior and the other candidate as the anti christ, and it goes both ways.

I don’t love that we’ve started to attach so much of our identity to which cable news channel we watch or which candidate we’re voting for. I have a dear friend at work who is voting for the same candidate as me but she’s so consumed and obsessed by all of it that it’s almost impossible to have a conversation with her.

If anyone I know asks me privately, I don’t mind sharing who I voted for. But I’m not going to go out of my way to broadcast it ever.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Dawg84

Anon1717806835

Well-known member
Jun 7, 2024
215
624
93
I remember growing up - who you voted for was more of a private matter. Is it 100% bc of social media?
Where I live, if I put a sign up supporting the Presidential candidate that I am voting for, the sign would (a) be yanked out of my yard before the next sunrise, (b) my house would be egged, or (3) both.

I think our current political / social environment has it roots in talk radio, got worse with message boards, and then 24 hour opinion news took it up another notch. Twitter and Facebook was akin to throwing gasoline on all of it.

The political identity / tribalism is really bizarre to me.
 

kired

Well-known member
Aug 22, 2008
6,543
1,558
113
I never understood the point of having a yard sign period unless you personally know the candidate. Congrats, you chose one of two options. I’m going to have a yard sign that says Tails 2024.
Had a neighbor few years ago with opposing yard signs for a city council race. I was like damn, you know he’s not getting any till that elections over.
 

The Peeper

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2008
12,502
5,921
113
Unlike golfer, nobody knows who I vote for, it's nobody's business and I don't give a rats arse who you vote for for the same reason. My wife doesn't even ask me. You can't sit down and have a conversation about religion or politics that doesn't eventually evolve into a debate then an argument, kind of like religious and political threads on here that get locked......so why bother
 

FormerBully

Well-known member
Sep 2, 2022
1,596
2,462
113
my parents were staunch Republicans but they never had any candidates signs in their yard. my brother ran for Rankin County Alderman in 2018 and they didn't even put his sign in the yard. as far as me personally yall might have noticed im a Republican but i have never had any t-shirts or caps or signs in the yard , but if anyone asked i would not have any problem answering them. Go Pubs!
Sounds like he was just the least favorite kid. You need to run to see if they love you more and put your sign in the yard.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Maroon Eagle

FormerBully

Well-known member
Sep 2, 2022
1,596
2,462
113
I got a Wicker/Trump mailer yesterday. I told my wife if they didn’t do any ads, mailers, or campaigning they would both win the state. That is part of the issue with politics. We have no option.

I think where we currently are in politics has a lot to do with the decline of religion. People are less religious but still need hope. Also, we have this inward desire to worship. Trump/dems have replaced God. I see it throughout our State and it is sad.
 
Last edited:

OG Goat Holder

Well-known member
Sep 30, 2022
8,519
8,054
113
We had mock elections in school when I was a kid.

I think it's more private now than ever. ETA: But the loudest ones are very loud and take up the most bandwidth. They think everybody wants to hear their stupid opinions.
 
Last edited:

grinnindawg

Member
Aug 22, 2012
151
2
18
I remember growing up - who you voted for was more of a private matter. Is it 100% bc of social media?
Social media is certainly part of it. Just as important are the techniques in the book below.

In the past the ability to persuade was a gift. Now it can be learned.

Watching "the news" and society after reading it is surreal.

I was a bit concerned reading a book by someone who spent there life studying persuasion that the last chapter was going to instruct me where to send my life savings.

Not sure why this didn't post correctly. It's the book "Presuasion" by Robert Cialdini.
I'll try again.

www.amazon.com/Pre-Suasion-Revolutionary-Way-Influence-Persuade/dp/1501109804/ref=sr_1_1?
 
Last edited:

UpTheMiddlex3Punt

Well-known member
May 28, 2007
17,234
2,501
113
This was the turning point.
napoleon dynamite vote GIF by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
 

STATEgrad04

Active member
Mar 3, 2008
564
356
63
I think one factor is that we have, as a society, become more dependent on government. Both Democrats and Republicans. Government has progressively inserted themselves into our lives more and more (think frog in the pot of water), causing more of the dependence (whether conscious or subconscious). When you are more dependent on something you become more invested and more vocal.
 

Maroon Eagle

Well-known member
May 24, 2006
16,679
5,770
102
People knew who you voted for.

Social media just made it more public and made folks’ stances more public (and - often at the same time - dumb).
 

OopsICroomedmypants

Well-known member
Sep 29, 2022
1,107
1,475
113
I got a Wicker/Trump mailer yesterday. I told my wife if they didn’t do any ads, mailers, or campaigning they would both win the state. That is part of the issue with politics. We have no option.

I think where we currently are in politics has a lot to do with the decline of religion. People are less religious but still need hope. Also, we have this inward desire to worship. Trump/dems have replaced God. I see it throughout our State and it is sad.
You nailed it. Also, one side in this election is clearly not on God’s side so I think more people are vocal about candidate choice because of that.
 

PooPopsBaldHead

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2017
8,095
5,498
113
It's in line with when the majority of people started to blame others for their problems in life.

It's easier to say my life sucks because of a politician than because I made bad personal choices. So now that I have identified the problem, I must publicly pronounce that I have the solution in case any onlookers are thinking my life sucks, I want them to be assured my sucky life is not my fault.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Get unlimited access today.

Pick the right plan for you.

Already a member? Login