Tagged with " All That Other Home Stuff"
Sep 15, 2008 - Uncategorized    No Comments

Poll Position

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from segala.comIn this Vested Wisdom entry, I will give a brief overview of the polls which are being talked about online and on the television media. No, I am not going to take a particular side but this entry is literally about the polls themselves.

Do we have political polls in the Philippines? Yes, we do but not anywhere near the level of obsession the various forms of media have with them here in the USA. In the USA, there are new polls coming out daily from Zogby, Gallup, CBS, NBC, Fox, and etc. It seems every group has their set of pollsters. The catch is which polls are believable as the numbers are all over the place.

We have to look at polls with a great deal of doubt and count them all as untrustworthy for a number of reasons as polls are so very easily manipulated to distort numbers into a particular goal. What are the warning signs and things to question?

First, I have to go back to restating what I have said before. The USA is a very large country with 330 million people from a wide variety of cultural, ethnic, religious, and fiscal backgrounds. The media and the political parties attempt to get data to try and group people by gender or whatever. That is the first thing a person has to seriously question. Those reporting on the polling data are trying to advance a position or a story but the citizens of the USA are a collection of diverse individuals that are not easily split into categories. If a set of parents were ½ Native American/ ½ African American and ½ Caucasian / ½ Asian, what category would their children belong to?

Next is did they get a proper sampling of the citizens in America? Did they contact and speak in full with 2000 or more from a collection of small towns, big cities, Mid-West vs. Californian, high paid, low paid, business owner, employee, single, married, or any of the many things that make people different? Most of them say their sampling only came from 1000 or so. By polling standards, it must be at least 1500.

Then we have to question whether or not they placed a bias in the format of the questions. If so, then the information they present is worthless as it was set-up with leading questions. Remember that most parties involved will pick and choose the numbers they want to focus on.

Reading or listening to the details of what is being reported on is important too. The key phrases are “x% of people who responded to whatever say whatever.” Why is that important? If 1000 people are surveyed or polled and only 100 responded to whatever and of that 100 only 40 said yes, it would be reported as 40% of people responding to blah agreed. What they will not do is give you the actual percentages which would instead have been 4%. It is easy to manipulate the numbers to look much better than they are.

So what is the wise thing to do regarding anyone who cites a poll? Ignore it.

Thank you,

Anah

photo credits:http://segala.com

And the Mystery Deepens

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It seems that the mystery I had previously reported on a couple weeks ago has taken a twist.

The mystery is us trying to track who has been stealing our dried corn on the cob from in front of us on different nights. At first we suspected crows but the cob is a bit too big and heavy for them. The doves peck at them but are not designed for carrying a cob away. It definitely isn’t any of the smaller birds as the cob of corn is bigger than they are.

Our primary suspects were the chipmunks and not Alvin or Simon but real ones that run around here. They may drag the corn on the cob a short distance but their holes are fairly close. The chipmunks do not seem like the culprit when it comes to taking the corn on the cob all the way to the other side of the building. Those cute little buggers have no reason to. (Baka naman, taong pusa? haha! *joke*)

Now we have learned another detail in this growing mystery. There may be more players in the corn on the cob game. It seems we have spotted a rabbit inviting itself in but they usually eat fresh greens and not dried corn. So that isn’t a prime suspect.

We have recently been informed that sometimes we get visited by deer and raccoons. Both are big enough to carry off a cob of corn. Both are active at night. My bets are on the raccoon though. But how do we confirm all of this? My cameras are not really set up for night vision.

Suggestions?

Anah