• @[email protected]
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    795 months ago

    Trump does still lead in our national average — however narrowly. But the bigger problem for Biden though is that elections in the United States aren’t determined by the popular vote.

    That’s a problem for all of us. If the president were elected by popular vote, Trump would never have been president.

  • Admiral Patrick
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    5 months ago

    I just put together a model, and it predicts a 77% chance of the Hamburgler winning in 2024.

    Go vote. That’s the only thing that matters.

    • @[email protected]
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      145 months ago

      Party strategists always say their party is going to do well. It’s part of their job. I don’t think this is particularly meaningful, unless you think there’s some particular methodology he has access to that’s better than Silver’s.

        • @[email protected]
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          215 months ago

          Lol no that’s not how any of this works. If I flip a coin and correctly pick the outcome in 2024 will you start paying me to forecast elections?

            • @[email protected]
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              95 months ago

              In one single election, yes. It means nothing, especially when you understand that his job is not to generate an accurate prediction, it’s to energize core supporters into donating to the campaign.

              By the way, you can make the same argument in reverse—Trump always overperforms his polling right? If that prediction is accurate then Biden is absolutely going to get trounced. Now I don’t necessarily think this is correct, but it’s a slightly more sophisticated version of the fallacy you are falling prey to here.

        • ObjectivityIncarnate
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          205 months ago

          This is a perfectly succinct, textbook example of Outcome Bias.

          Betting $1 with a 1 in 3 chance to win $2 is objectively a bad idea; the odds are against you. It doesn’t stop being a bad idea if you win the $2 after 1 bet.

  • @[email protected]
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    495 months ago

    Young people don’t answer polling calls, and I’m personally expecting the highest under 30 vote turnout ever. No one can predict where this will go.

    • @[email protected]
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      245 months ago

      He’s always been a fake. Claims to be “just calling balls and strikes” but actually has a center-right agenda. He had a good parlay in 2008 and people have been treating him like a sorcerer ever since.

      • Optional
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        85 months ago

        Nathaniel Read Silver (born January 13, 1978) is an American statistician, writer, and poker player who analyzes baseball, basketball, and elections

        Baseball, basketball, and elections. Sure.

  • Nomecks
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    365 months ago

    Nate’s predictions turned to crap in 2018 and never came back. Polls don’t work anymore and Nate is handicapping trash.

  • @[email protected]
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    295 months ago

    Got a text the other day to demand my support for Biden by completing a poll via some suspicious shortened link. Might’ve been legit, more likely a phishing attempt. The wording of it just made me think of the “Trade offer” meme.

    Didn’t respond. If this is how pollsters operate they’re gonna be out of business within a decade (should be already) or just continue to get skewed results from braindead fools who click on suspicious links and also vote for blatantly unfit, deranged and dangerous candidates.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      95 months ago

      I’ve gotten two texts from two different numbers claiming I’m not registered to vote. Which is weird, because I voted in a primary a couple months back. So I checked my state’s voter registration and I’m still there, still getting a mail-in ballot like I asked.

      I did a bit of forensics on the links but they just redirect to a GCE instance that returns a 500 error, and the domain registration is anonymized so I can’t get any info there. But I’m worried a lot of people are clicking a link that might take them off the voting rolls.

    • Optional
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      65 months ago

      Exactly so. They were always more performative than predictive (remember all those things polls got wrong? No? Funny, that), but in 2024 they’re absolutely reaching and pretending like everything’s normal. Trust them, bro.

    • Sabata
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      55 months ago

      They get very accurate polling numbers from the “Dumb enough to click on unsolicited sketchy links” demographic.

  • @[email protected]
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    245 months ago

    Same models from 2008-2020, at this point in the cycle, it had Hillary winning, and Biden winning, both by a decent margin.

    I think it depends what the campaigns do with this information. Coast, or fight harder?

    Vote vote vote. (Just once though).

    • Optional
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      125 months ago

      Half credit for not giving Hillary the 97% chance everyone else and their dog did. But that’s it.

  • Asherah
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    225 months ago

    I am legitimately scared for my safety with the upcoming election. I’m trans and if Trump tries to take my HRT away I will end my life. It would be the final straw so to speak. I will not be forced to live a lie.

    • @[email protected]
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      125 months ago

      2016 was dire, but Nate Silver is often wrong. Polling as it is done today is unreliable at best, and outright lies at worst.

      Vote locally, build support networks and hopefully we can weather whatever comes.

    • @[email protected]
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      55 months ago

      could try and get diy hrt from reputable tested vendors. if dark web marketplaces can use the mail to ship real illegal drugs, surely some estradiol will be fine.

  • @[email protected]
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    225 months ago

    Remember, Nate Silver predicted that Hillary Clinton would win in 2016, and when Trump won instead, it was chalked up to the fact that it really was a random chance.

    Don’t panic about this. Keep quiet and keep doing the work to get Trump thrown out. And charge your mental health bills to the Democrats, for putting up an old man up for election in 2020, one who’s even older than Trump, in the first place.

    • @[email protected]
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      135 months ago

      I don’t remember him predicting that she would win. His model (https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2016-election-forecast/) gave her a 71% chance of winning. 71% is a long way from 100%, and the result of that election definitely fit within the model.

      That said, you are absolutely correct… we need to keep shining a light on the realities of each of these candidates, because in the light of day Biden is a much better choice than Trump.

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Yeah, his model gave her less of a chance than most others and their podcast constantly, over and over, warned people that this means Trump wins three elections if you run it ten times. People who wrote 538 off because it didn’t call the election for Trump are some of the dumbest mouthbreathers you’ll run into.

      • @[email protected]
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        45 months ago

        Which would make it a more extreme position than his position in this election, so the point stands.

        • @[email protected]
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          65 months ago

          I agree… I was simply clarifying that Nate Silver did NOT predict that Hillary would win (nor is he predicting that Trump will win this election), which is a common misunderstanding about probability. For these types of models to be meaningful to the public, there needs to be literacy on what is meant by the percentages given. Really, I’m just reinforcing rodneylives’ point from another angle!

    • @[email protected]
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      45 months ago

      Iirc, didn’t he give Trump a much higher chance of winning than other outlets, even though it was still a small chance compared to Hillary?

    • @[email protected]
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      15 months ago

      Yeah well there was also that nice October surprise. Prediction models don’t work well with stuff like that.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        And yet, that is what those models claim to do. If the possibility of late-breaking events is not included in the model then the model is flawed.

        • @[email protected]
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          14 months ago

          Then nothing matters because the bombshell pictures proving child sexual assault could always drop. An October surprise is called that for a reason. It’s something out of left field that could not have been predicted, prepared for, or recovered from. To say prediction models must allow for that means you never get anything other than a 50/50 prediction and everything is useless. We should all just stay home and let life come at us. After all, we could get hit by a toilet from space at any moment.

  • @[email protected]
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    215 months ago

    I think there is a lot this fails to capture because certain things are unprecedented. Michigan’s GOP is in utter disarray and it isn’t the only one. And overturning Roe v Wade has energized the left and disillusioned whatever center remains.

    Now these facts are baked into the polling already, so obviously that’s a big concern, but I believe this means polling is too far right across the board. I think who makes up likely voters has shifted. RvW drew in younger voters and I think now that they are engaged they will remain so.

    Time will tell. I’ve seen far less Trump support this year than I did in 2020, which yeah is anecdotal, but I think it’s an indicator. Of course, even if I’m correct, Michigan isn’t going to carry the election alone, and it looks like the rest of the rust belt is further to the right.

  • @[email protected]
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    125 months ago

    Silver’s model will only actually matter once voting starts. Until then he may as well be a poll aggregator. Which, if the polls are flawed, then his aggregation and model will be flawed.

  • @[email protected]
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    95 months ago

    It’s all statistics. It means that if we ran the 2024 election millions of times in his model, Trump would win more than Biden. But we will only get one shot, so the number is kind of useless.

    I was watching the Mets game this weekend on ESPN, and they were ahead of the Cubs by a few runs. ESPN has a tracker that estimates “Win Probability” and their model gave the Mets a 75% chance to win. But have you seen the Mets this year? They’ve blown a bunch of games late. Every Mets fan watching knew that their bullpen wasn’t good enough to merit that rating.

    The Mets did end up winning that game. (Thanks, Grimace.) But that doesn’t change the fact that no matter what math is behind their win prediction model, it just doesn’t feel right to apply statistics like that to one-off events.

      • Optional
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        5 months ago

        I predict people will get sick of that shit. Especially when they start branding it as AI-driven.

        Edit: with the exception of that football-predicting octopus. He’s cool.

    • @person420
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      65 months ago

      Mets aren’t good enough? ::cries in Yankees:::

      • @[email protected]
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        45 months ago

        Don’t worry, little Yankee fan. It’s not your fault you ran headfirst into the Grimace Effect. Now come closer – I need to bottle up some of those tears for comfort when the wheels fall off the wagon after the ASG, as is tradition.