MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
In a veer to reality-based elections, Nate's total prediction this time, 49 right last gives us hope that the effects of the chattering class will be diminished next time.
After chumps like Dick Morris blew all credibility (did they have any left?) proclaiming a blowout to be, when any casual glance at the ground games in needed states proved it hoo-hah?
Well, casual glances have never been enough, and while I'm sure reality-challenged bravado will continue, the more specific indicators will allow immediate blowback.
What doesn't look good is the trend to micro-elections, where the rest of us chumps sit it out while the candidates focus on the opinion of 10,000 valuable independent swing voters in 3 truly swing states. Somehow I figure we'll adapt. Maybe.
But the truly big thing with Nate is he ushers back in science into the wooly chambers of the disbelieving class. Yeah, not just teabaggers and creationists - the media is awfully Barbie with its "math is tough" stuff. (they couldn't figure out Bush v. Gore social security plans, they couldn't understand Romney's (lack of a) budget or what Obama did with $700+ in medicare savings - in short, J School makes Drama school look like nuclear scientists).
So Big Data is the new black. Social media will go from soft and fluffy to analytical, projections and visualizations. And hopefully that will trend across polling issues, validating data on topics like climate change, or tracking the number of drone strike casualties this month.
I'm overall not a big fan of policy only by data-based analysis, but in a time where we've grown dumb as a pile of rocks, it's time to get back to basic arithmetic.
Facebook proved in its IPO that aggregation for aggregation's sake is no longer a winner - 30 million Jonah Goldberg's tweeting aids humanity not in the slightest, even if you combine them. That's where Nate's weighting comes in - separating the wheat from the truly useless chaff. Could be brutal - I long to be Big Data's grim reaper.
Comments
The turnout of Hispanics and the African American communities in places like CO and FL says that when it comes time for messaging, you can't just focus on 10,000 swing voters and appeals to what you might think they're afraid of - not if you want to success on the national scale.
But I am hopeful that now even the likes of Joe Scarborough (with his new mustache) will begin to change the way they talk about pollsters like Nate. A nice shift toward reality-based thinking. Given the seemingly increased tone of compromise, we might actually begin to make some progress.
by Elusive Trope on Wed, 11/07/2012 - 8:47am
Yup. It was a losing night for scary rhetoric, and a winning night for heartfelt, personal conversations about political decisions that matter to actual people. Hard to believe something so simple could be the next wave!
by erica20 on Wed, 11/07/2012 - 1:08pm
I should note that Silver didn't just pick winners - he picked probabilities / margins pretty accurately.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 11/07/2012 - 3:13pm
I am nuts about this sentiment!
Nate Silver and a guy named Nate Cohen? who appears on MSNBC all the time won this effort.
Oh, well who had the percentages correct 6 months ago, 12 months ago and the day before yesterday?
hahahahahahahha
Well Gallop sure the hell did not!
Rasmussen is a joke!
Oh that is enough right now.
NOBODY WHO GETS THE PREDICTIONS RIGHT IS REMEMBERED!
Nate won in 2008 and he will win in 2014 and ....
THE NATES ARE THE MEN.
hahahahahah
Sourcrauthammer will be around until I am dead.
And they pay the sourcrauthammers millions to lie.
WHAT A COUNTRY!
by Richard Day on Wed, 11/07/2012 - 8:31pm
But Nate relies on Gallup and Rasmussen doing their jobs, however poorly - when he no longer has a batch of poorly done polls to correlate and weight, his method is toast.
As such, Public Policy Polling deserves credit as the most accurate actual pollsters.
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 11/08/2012 - 12:53am