Thanks. It's interesting data, and the trend is definitely there in terms of liberal leanings for presidential candidates.
That said,
1) presidential candidate preference is not always a suitable proxy for general voting patterns/party preference. Inferences and guesses can be made, but that's about it.
2) this doesn't really refute what I was saying about socially liberal and economically conservative ideological preferences of media figures. I'll see if I can find that study sometime this week.
2) this doesn't really support or refute any claim of biased reporting. Again, for you all, there's no mistake where I sit politically. But I do not, implicitly or explicitly, allow that to enter the classroom. Likewise, we're still stuck at square one, with people simply living in la-la land thinking that the media's gone apeshit covering Bristol Palin (folks evidently didn't want to do an AP or Lexis Nexis search before making that claim), and on the other, people saying "oh, you only need to examine articles with a critical eye" sort of confirmation bias nonsence to demonstrate liberal media bias.
I'm still not sold - but one thing you did prove; it's logically fallacious to incorrectly extend data findings that don't come from what the data say, but nevertheless, we can be sure that, of the people surveyed in the link you provided, the majority are highly likely to vote Democrat.
Ok.
[quote name='Koggit']I'd love to hear a republican explain why democratic candidates nearly always performs better with those who have a college education than those who are less educated, which the opposite is true of republican candidates.[/QUOTE]
college degree = more likely to be Republican
professional/graduate degree (MD, PhD, JD, EdD, etc.) = more likely to be Democrat