• @jj4211
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        44 months ago

        While the sentiment is solid that polls are not a very good predictor, what’s even more unreliable is leaning into anecdotes of seeing “excitement” in a social media post, which is what this article is doing. So your comment comes off as ‘discard the polls, someone on social media says they see lots of Harris for president signs in Florida’.

        So it seems reasonable to say the polls indicate a less rosy picture than some social media post expressing feel good about seeing signs of Harris enthusiasm, but ultimately either way don’t feel defeated nor complacent and get out and vote your preference.

        • @Buddahriffic
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          214 months ago

          It’s not very difficult to use logic to see why the data isn’t as useful as you seem to think it is.

        • @[email protected]
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          184 months ago

          Do you remember 2016? Polls were saying Clinton would beat Trump by a significant margin.

          If you’re approaching this logically, you’d notice the trend on data being unreliable when Trump is on the ballot.

          It’s mostly attributed to inaccuracies in putting appropriate weight on likely voters vs. unlikely voters. People considered unlikely to vote by pollsters went out and voted, and they voted for Trump.

          Measuring racism is also something that polling is bad at. People simply don’t like to admit to being racist. Is this related to the reason why polling on Trump is inaccurate? We don’t know because there’s no data on this. Some things polling just fails at. Can’t do much when people won’t provide you with data that may be relevant.

          We do know that Trump’s primary numbers were lower than polling indicated it would be. Does that mean his numbers in the general will be lower than the polls we’re seeing right now? We don’t know.

          What effect did January 6 have on people’s decisions? Some people may not want to talk about it. But the week before election they’ll probably be seeing political ads showing video about Jan. 6 and ask people straight up “do you want this to happen again?” which might people who might say Jan. 6 wasn’t a big deal to privately think otherwise just stay home on Election Day. Polling is based on past trends, so isn’t going to be good a predicting anything after unprecedented events.

          After this election pollsters have a baseline for how likely people will vote for a candidate lost the previous election, tried to overthrow the government, was convicted of felonies, had an assassination attempt vs. a candidate that suddenly became prominent after the sitting President and presumptive nominee dropped out the race 3.5 months before the election. But right now there’s not a lot of data there on this particular scenario.

          The data is simply too unreliable to make any prediction on anything. So… vote!

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago
            1. Not all polls predicted that

            2. The polls pretty accurately predicted the popular vote, but Trump won in 6 highly contested swing states which at the time included Florida

            • @[email protected]
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              14 months ago

              Even if that were the case, we would need some data to indicate which poll is accurate so then we’ll know some number that won’t actually determine who will end up as president.

              Might be better to just ignore the simplistic number that doesn’t indicate anything useful and instead focus on numbers indicating what issues people care about and try to convince as many people as possible to vote for Harris.

          • @jj4211
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            14 months ago

            A fair assessment as to why polling may be unreliable. However keep in mind this thread started as a rebuttal of blind anecdotal enthusiasm in a social media post. The story is ‘someone posted on social media that Florida looks like Harris country’, and they posted that polls suggest that post is too optimistic. Polls may be imperfect, but the methodology is far closer to informative than “I saw some Harris campaign signs around”.

          • 【J】【u】【s】【t】【Z】
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            04 months ago

            Good write up, but you’re doing the thing you said not to do (approaching this logically).

            My half baked opinion on this is that people are lying to pollsters. I think it’s people of all political walks and for varied reasons, but it’s the only thing that keeps making sense.

            Even exit polls are getting it wrong. Like, that can only happen if people are lying.

            • @jj4211
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              14 months ago

              Exit polls getting it wrong didn’t mean people are lying. People may be refusing to answer in a way that skews one way or another.

        • @assassin_aragorn
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          104 months ago

          Recognize that the data may be flawed. Polling is incredibly accurate, but only if you survey a simple random sample. And that is very difficult to do. It introduces a lot of difficulty in getting right answers. Some polling methodologies will try to manipulate the raw data and weight it to try and make it representative, but that introduces a whole host of problems.

          2016 and 2020 under predicted Trump’s popularity for instance, while 2022 under predicted Democrats’ popularity. We don’t know what the situation now.

          Polls are still useful, but you have to treat them with a grain of salt. What tends to be more accurate is changes within the same polling group over time.

          • @jj4211
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            24 months ago

            Problem is that polling would have to have all the exact same behaviors as an actual election

            • The ballot boxes don’t come to the people, the people opt to go to the ballot boxes. So cold calling/mailing people means you’ve changed the engagement to include people that wouldn’t actually go out to vote. Some try to measure likelihood to vote, but if the reason is ‘laziness’, a lot of people are unlikely to admit they won’t vote.
            • Some population sees the polls as a strategic tool, and may modify their participation to advance what they think their outcome needs. Declare support for the opposing candidate to put the fear of losing into like-minded voters, for example.
            • People know the polls don’t actually decide anything, so even if they will vote, they may dismiss polls as a waste of their time. Or even being distrustful of the agenda behind the poll and decline to participate thinking that works best to undermine potentially malicious polling
            • People have more confidence in the ballot being secret than polling. If someone thinks their answer will be seen/overheard by a spouse, that may change their tune. If someone thinks something vile would actually be in their benefit, they may be reluctant to admit that, but happy to act on it at the ballot box.

            Now polls are better than “gut feelings” or “this person posted to social media their gut feelings”, but the ultimate answer is we have no way of accurate prediction, so don’t be encouraged or discouraged too much and just go vote.

            • @assassin_aragorn
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              04 months ago

              You need to look at the actual statistical science. If you find 45% support for something, but there’s a 3% margin of error with a 95% conference interval, then there’s a 95% chance that the true value is anywhere from 42-48%. And that’s with a perfect, simple random sample.

              It has its uses, but you have to be aware of its limitations and caveats.

                • @assassin_aragorn
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                  04 months ago

                  Are you just arguing for the sake of arguing? I’m saying that even a perfect sample will not necessarily lead to an accurate conclusion, and having a perfect sample is incredibly difficult on top of that.

                  Now factor in a major event occurring, and people’s opinions and thoughts being in flux. To properly gauge mood, you need to give people time to process – hence why immediate polling is not helpful.

                  You do realize that the person you originally responded to was saying that polls probably aren’t helpful right now, not that polls are universally useless?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    04 months ago

                    Check the context of this thread. Then my words will make more sense and your point reveals itself to be coping to reaffirm unscientific bias.

        • @MonkRome
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          4 months ago

          Polls become more and more unreliable in the modern age. We have the least accurate polling in 40 years according to pew research. Pollsters report a 3% margin of error when it’s more like 6-7%. There is every reason to be skeptical of polling and not take them too seriously.

          • @[email protected]
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            -94 months ago

            Even if Polling is less accurate than it was, and I haven’t seen any such claims by an authority on this matter least of all Pew Research, it is still a lot more accurate than your thoughts and feelings, mate.

            Take a look at THIS LINK. It’s FiveThirtyEight’s composite polling for the state with individual polls listed down below, one by Redfield & Wilton Strategies sponsored by The Telegraph with Trump +8 and another by InsiderAdvantage sponsored by WTVT (Tampa, Fla.) with Trump +10.

            • @MonkRome
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              154 months ago

              He said don’t rely on polls “too much”, not “not at all”. Those with reading comprehension would recognize what he meant was that there is real possibility that there is a smaller gap to bridge than you might think.

              You’re on some weak ego tangent that has nothing to do with anything, quoting an expired poll aggregate of Biden v Trump.

              • @[email protected]
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                14 months ago

                Now here is what I am saying: Rely on the polls. Use data to back your beliefs. Reject emotional responses which fuel your personal biases, be objective and make the best choices based on verifiably true information. If you have a better source than a poll that is great, if not then the poll is better than you.

                • @rekorse
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                  14 months ago

                  If you think polling is that reliable be my guest. Noones trying to force you to be reasonable.

                  • @jj4211
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                    14 months ago

                    I think his point is not that polling is supremely reliable, just that it is more reliable than the article here, which is entirely based on one person’s gut feeling about what they randomly see (and want to see). Florida may not be a lost cause , but it’s also not something to get your hopes up too much over. The polling is at least a decent relative indicator that FL is a much more uphill battle than other states with a closer polling margin.

        • BigFig
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          44 months ago

          Every poll in 2016 showed Trump losing, until he didnt

          • @[email protected]
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            14 months ago

            Look at this list of polls for 2016: LINK

            You can see the largest sample size polls say about Clinton +2, which is close to the national popular vote, but there are several in the list that predicted a trump advantage. Trump won due to single digit wins in swing states.

    • @Soleos
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      104 months ago

      You can have a surge of support while still behind… That’s how you catch up! They are just starting in Florida. Not sure if they can make up the large gap, but they damn well better try!

    • @Maggoty
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      64 months ago

      We only have 2 polls out of Florida. We really need more data to say anything.

          • @[email protected]
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            -74 months ago

            I literally did, my entire statement is that there isn’t any data to support the claim of an eruption of Harris enthusiasm in Florida, if anything there is only limited data to the contrary. The article doesn’t even mention any polling at all.

            • @naught101
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              14 months ago

              Maybe you mean figuratively?