MontanaHatchet said:
I have to wonder where that logic was when McCain was leading in dozens of polls. Are people scared of being judged by a random pollster? If someone asks you who you'd vote for over the phone and you respond with a candidate they don't like, will they track you down and kill you? I'm not entirely sure of how these polls are conducted, so I wouldn't know. As for the battleground states, McCain would have to win nearly all of them to beat Obama in electoral votes. I'm sure McCain "could" win the election, just like I said it was "almost" certain. It would be pretty difficult for him at this point.
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I really don't know what the deep psychological reasoning that professionals would give you ...
Human beings are hardwired for social interaction, and it has been demonstrated that the same portion of your brain that responds to physical pain responds to social rejection. Most people will have faced social rejection a similar number of times as they have faced physical pain, and they would (probably) have produced defence mechanisms to protect them from being rejected. If an individual fears that there is a possibility of being rejected by the pollster if they said "I plan to vote for McCain" their defence mechanism may kick in and they might respond "I'm voting for Obama" or "I haven't decided yet".







