Would you play Russian Roulette with a 10 chambered revolver and one bullet?
90% - 10% doesn't mean a 1/10 chance.
Would you play Russian Roulette with a 10 chambered revolver and one bullet?
Pretty much my thoughts.Would you play Russian Roulette with a 10 chambered revolver and one bullet?
Would you play Russian Roulette with a 10 chambered revolver and one bullet?
I'm still not convinced. If Brexit has taught me anything its not to under estimate the average joe. They'll believe just about anything if someone shouts it long enough.
I think more a scepticism of science and statistics, after a long run of mistakes from such in British politics.So you privilege fear and mysticism above science and statistics ?
So you privilege fear and mysticism above science and statistics ?
It's not really fear and mysticism when we're just after a major vote which went against the polls to an extent, with it being a vote won by people who are arguably quite similar to types likely to vote for Trump.
US election polling may be a lot more consistent and reliable, but this is probably the most unpredictable/bizarre election we've seen in a long, long time, with lots of twists, turns and swings, and if there's any election where it's been more difficult for polling companies to remain accurate then it's probably this one, with possible influxes of new voters, changing allegiances in certain states, third parties etc.
It didn't. People were misinformed, it's not the polls' fault.
Well, bizarre as it is, polls have correctly called about 95% of the contests this cycle.
I think more a scepticism of science and statistics, after a long run of mistakes from such in British politics.
Including those whose jobs depend on them knowing the result, who had commissioned their own private exit polls, at considerable expense.It didn't. People were misinformed, it's not the polls' fault.
I'm failing to see how this is not reason for us to think Trump 'may win'.That's not to say Hillary has a 100% chance of winning, Trump has about a 15% chance of winning, which is how the race should be assessed - as opposed to 'well Brexit happens therefore Trump may win'.
I'm failing to see how this is not reason for us to think Trump 'may win'.
I'm failing to see how this is not reason for us to think Trump 'may win'.
I'm failing to see how this is not reason for us to think Trump 'may win'.
Quite.Yeah, 15% isn't some fringe, outsider candidate...it's an underdog, true, but it's still someone with a realistic chance of winning.
Quite.
He may win because it's a 2 horse race and statistically there's always a chance before Clinton reaches 270 on Election night.
It's pretty much 'Dumb and Dumber' atm.
Yeah, 15% isn't some fringe, outsider candidate...it's an underdog, true, but it's still someone with a realistic chance of winning.
15% is not a realistic chance of winning in the slightest. Even 25% isn't. Statistically, that's so monumentally behind. It's a bigger number than I'd like, I'd like to think Americans are smarter than that, but whether it's 1% or 20% doesn't change the enormous advantage that Hillary has.
It's essentially one in six, right? I understand that's not how elections work, of course, and 'realistic' is probably the wrong word for me to use, but he's not someone with an almost impossible chance of winning...plenty of things will have happened in sport/other betting markets this week wherein someone won something with a 15% chance of doing so.
Although I'll also of course acknowledge that it's just one model of determining the race, and as @Raoul said a lot of the other models predicting this have it at 90%+, which is more reassuring.
Let's put it like this, it's David Moyes's Sunderland vs Mourinho's United at Old Trafford. They are down 3-0 and 10 men at HT. The likelihood of them winning is about equal to the likelihood of Drumpf squeaking it, by most models.
It's 1 in 6, but it's nothing compared to 5 in 6. You can make it sound as scary as you want until you realise that the flipside is so overwhelming that it's essentially nothing to worry about. If Trump was 1 in 6 and Hilary was 2 in 6 then sure, but that's not the case. I would put money on this being an absolute landslide, I've said for a long time that he'll get nowhere near winning.
Only by the ones that are on 99% or so. I'd imagine odds for what you're describing happening would be well, well above 100/1. Whereas odds for Trump winning are somewhere around 4/1 to 5/1 in most betting companies.
Nah, that's me pegging it at about 5% of him winning, about the mean between models. Stranger things have happened in football.
Betting market is essentially useless. They can't offer prohibitively high odds just in case things go tits up, it's a defense mechanism against the unthinkable rather than any foresight into the race. You will see the odds rising if polls hold steady as time runs out .Brexit shock was largely due to the market as well.
I'm prepared for the worst and won't relax until it is officially announced that Hillary has become the 1st female president of the US.I know there are people in this thread who are quite bullish about what the outcome of the election will be and have every faith in the polls etc, but we're all still going to breathe a massive sigh of relief when he loses, aren't we?
I'm prepared for the worst and won't relax until it is officially announced that Hillary has become the 1st female president of the US.
No matter how she improves in polls, Clintons 538 percent chances can't climb much more according to 538 themselves so they are likely understating her chances.
So polls from A+ pollsters in the last ten days:
Monmouth Univ. Clinton +12
Selzer & Company + 9
ABC News/Washington Post + 12
And if we add A rated ones
Fox News +6
SurveyUSA +10
Median: 10, Mean: 9.8
I'm happy