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Diadem wrote:very.
Even so though, isn't it possible to, assuming everyone of those delegate-delegates votes for said they were going to vote for, to calculate how many delegates Sanatorum and Romney will end up getting? Or at the least if it's a winner-takes-all or proportional system? I mean we must be able to do better than pretending those states have no effect all in in each candidate's outlook.
Diadem wrote:So they are voting for people who will vote for people who will vote for people to decide who is candidate in an election where more people will vote for people to vote for those candidates?
Makes sense.
Diadem wrote:So they are voting for people who will vote for people who will vote for people to decide who is candidate in an election where more people will vote for people to vote for those candidates?
Makes sense.
Tirian wrote:I'm a little boggled at what Missouri decided to spend their tax dollars on and even more boggled that it received any coverage at all, but never mind.
Diadem wrote:Tirian wrote:I'm a little boggled at what Missouri decided to spend their tax dollars on and even more boggled that it received any coverage at all, but never mind.
Wait, tax dollars? Are party primaries not paid for by the party?
sardia wrote:Don't worry too much about it, the campaign season draws millions of dollars that are fed into the media markets. Maybe the Reagonomics/trickledown/supply side theory will start working, and the people will see some of that money in some form or another.
Webzter wrote:Diadem wrote:Tirian wrote:I'm a little boggled at what Missouri decided to spend their tax dollars on and even more boggled that it received any coverage at all, but never mind.
Wait, tax dollars? Are party primaries not paid for by the party?
Looks like, sort of yes kindof maybe in SC
http://www.mediaite.com/tv/stephen-colb ... onditions/
and no in Missouri
http://www.komu.com/news/missouri-spend ... g-primary/
My uneducated guess would be that, generally, states that caucus are paid by the political parties and states which hold primaries have the primary funded by the state
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Sta ... d_caucuses
Ghostbear wrote:The margin of error I usually see is 2-3, and that only applies for individual polls- when you analyze them in aggregate, the margin of error plays in differently. I'm not well versed enough in statistics* to say how exactly, but if say, 5 polls come out, and they each have a margin of error of +5 points, and all of them show somebody up by 5 points, then that isn't the same as them being at 0-10. The collection of the polls is going to eat away at some of that margin of error- at least assuming they all use different polling methodologies (if it's the same methodology, they might just be repeating the same error every time).
Diadem wrote:Ghostbear wrote:The margin of error I usually see is 2-3, and that only applies for individual polls- when you analyze them in aggregate, the margin of error plays in differently. I'm not well versed enough in statistics* to say how exactly, but if say, 5 polls come out, and they each have a margin of error of +5 points, and all of them show somebody up by 5 points, then that isn't the same as them being at 0-10. The collection of the polls is going to eat away at some of that margin of error- at least assuming they all use different polling methodologies (if it's the same methodology, they might just be repeating the same error every time).
You are right, the error goes down. In fact it does down as the square root of the number of data points you have. So if you compare 5 polls, the error becomes 2.24 times smaller. Assuming the data is independent.
(
The math behind this is pretty simple. If you add two results A and B with error sA and sB the sum is A+B (obviously) with error Sqrt(sA2 + sB2. If sA = sB this becomes Sqrt(2) * sA. Add n results (with the same error s) and you get that the new error is Sqrt(n) * s. Calculating the mean is adding all the data points and dividing by how many you have. So the error of the mean is Sqrt(n) * s / n = s / Sqrt(n).
)
Gellert1984 wrote:Also, bomb president CIA al qaeda JFK twin towers jupiter moon martians [s]emtex.
buddy431 wrote:The trouble with Margin of Error cited in polls is that is assumes only random (statistical) errors, and discounts systematic errors.
Garm wrote:Also, too: Mitch McConnell looks kind of like a hamster.
Garm wrote:Also we see that the GOP has decided to jam their head up their ass regarding contraception (didn't someone admonish me about saying the GOP were waging a war on women?). I don't see how this hurts Obama, I just don't. In fact, I think it does the exact opposite. http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/02/mcconnell-gop-will-push-to-let-any-employer-deny-contraception-coverage.php
Garm wrote:@Dauric: Good points, all. Thanks. I really ought to be more careful with my language, it's altogether too easy to slip into reducing these complex issues to sounds bites that cover up the complexity of the underlying problem. Saying that the GOP wage a war on women is lazy. Sigh.
I disagree that conservatives are "giving voice to the past" but that's probably fodder for another thread.
EsotericWombat wrote:The uproar over the birth control decision didn't happen in a vacuum. The GOP platform has very recently become openly hostile to birth control. The failed personhood amendments in Mississippi and Colorado, the threat to shut down the government over Title X... This is quite clearly a sustained assault on women's health, whether we call it one or not. We might as well call it one.
Dauric wrote:Look at the way the GOP is couching the gay-marriage issue for example, from some of their rhetoric you'd think that teams of 'fabulously' equipped LGBT special-operatives were waiting on the "Go" command to rappel down the sides of every building and.. I dunno their victim-fantasy gets incoherent at this point but.. rewriting existing marriage licenses, bursting in to high-school auditoriums during prom to rearrange all the couples to be same-sex, force heterosexuals in to reeducation camps where they're made to fuck others of the same sex at gunpoint....
Actually that was a pretty awesome post.Malice wrote:
Probably even further off topic....
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
Malice wrote:I think allowing Michael Bay fans to marry one another does serve to legitimize a form of entertainment I find reprehensible as something perfectly normal. Frankly the traditional definition of marriage has always been "two people with good taste in cinema" and for the government (or activist judges) to come in and change that would be like putting a stamp of approval on this rising tide of sinful explosions.
LaserGuy wrote:Wouldn't it be better to have people who enjoy Michael Bay movies to marry each other, though, rather than having someone who enjoys Michael Bay marry someone who does not, and thus risk inflicting their passtime on people who have no interest in sinful explosions? Or worse, marry people who do not enjoy Michael Bay movies and then convince them that they actually do?
The Rock does not count as a Michael Bay movie, just for the record.
Malice wrote:I think allowing Michael Bay fans to marry one another does serve to legitimize a form of entertainment I find reprehensible as something perfectly normal. Frankly the traditional definition of marriage has always been "two people with good taste in cinema" and for the government (or activist judges) to come in and change that would be like putting a stamp of approval on this rising tide of sinful explosions.
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
I am not sure if this is a joke, but Garm means this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservati ... ConferenceIbid wrote:I'm going to guess you meant CSPAN, CPAC is the Canadian version. I mix them up all the time.
Yakk wrote:The question the thought experiment I posted is aimed at answering: When falling in a black hole, do you see the entire universe's future history train-car into your ass, or not?
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