People who vote knowing little to nothing about the actual candidates as people; instead going by what they've heard in propaganda, who makes eloquent speeches, voting straight by party line, voting for candidates from whom they believe will give them special benefits, or who celebrities say to vote for.
Someone: I'm voting for who will pay my mortgage and get me a Obamaphone and Obamacard!
Someone: He gives such good speeches! Change we can believe in!
Someone else: I will be voting for the other candidate because I believe in more freedom, liberty and self-reliance. It must be embarrassing to always live off the taxpayer teet like you do. Maybe you're a low information voter...
Disorientation, frustration, or confusion resulting from too muchmental or visual stimuli or attempts to process or organize multiple tasks simultaneously (See also io).
"I've been on computer all day--Newsgroups, IRC, IM, e-mail, surfing the Net. I've gotta cut down on the self-induced information overload."
"The first week of my freshman semester was total information overload."
"I didn't want to go back to the hotel, but after a day in downtown New York, I was suffering from information overload."
Someone who so frequently occupies themselves with receiving or sending information or communication that it resembles an addiction. Usually a computer, and often the internet are used.