Don't Read My Lips 66
scitex writes "Two economists, Rasa Karapandza and Milos Bozovic, from University Pompu Fabra, Barcelona wrote a very interesting paper "You Can Fool Some People Sometimes..." They say that on all US Presidential Elections from 1960, when presidential debates were held, won the candidate that used less future tense in the debate. First debate was televised in 1960. They predict that these elections will be won by George W. Bush. They used a similar approach to analyze performance of US companies and found that companies that use less future tense in their annual reports perform better. Will this change the way companies write they reports and presidential candidates speak?"
I can't help but notice... (Score:5, Funny)
...that they used the future tense to predict the outcome of the election.
Re:I can't help but notice... (Score:2)
The tendency is also to hope that things can or will only get better.
In effect, the election is seen as an exit hatch to a better ending, or another chance at getting it right.
Re:I can't help but notice... (Score:3, Insightful)
(11 elections since 1960, minus 3 for which there were no debates.)
Re:I can't help but notice... (Score:1)
Re:I can't help but notice... (Score:1)
Yoda needs a grammar spanking (Score:2)
Where I came from, won is past tense, but hey... don't let my illiterate hick colloquialisms get you down...
Re:liberals (Score:2)
Incumbents talk about their record (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Incumbents talk about their record (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Incumbents talk about their record (Score:1)
I think there is a lot of truth in this. However, Kerry has been in the senate for a lot of years, yet I don't hear him talking a lot about what he has done. Why not? He should be showing how his record of votes, submitted bills, etc., makes him a better choice. But mostly I hear BUSH talking about kerry's past, not kerry, except for the Vietnam distraction.
Check out the stuff kerry has sponsered in tw
Re:Incumbents talk about their record (Score:2)
If someone robs your house, do you care that the cop who catches him is an asshole? No, because the other gu
Re:Incumbents talk about their record (Score:1)
Re:Incumbents talk about their record (Score:2, Informative)
Like most statistics (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, the divorce rate in North America is very high. Pretend that it's an even 50% of marriages that end in divorce.
If you get married, you are not beholden to that statistic. Whether or not you get divorced cannot be predicted by the statistic. You do not have a 50/50 chance of breaking it off with your partner. The conditions may exist that cause a 50% divorce rate, but they may not apply to you, for whatever reason.
Predicting things from past results is interesting, and sometimes something to talk about, but they don't mean anything. Up until a couple of weeks ago, nobody had ever come back from being down 3 games to 0 in the World Series.
Re:Like most statistics (Score:1, Informative)
You're thinking of the ALCS where the Red Sox were down 3-0 and came back to win 4-3. It hadn't previously been done in any 7 game series in Major League Baseball.
Re:Like most statistics (Score:2)
There are lies, damn lies, and statistics.
Re:Like most statistics (Score:1)
I'm going to stop trying to quit smoking.
Re:Like most statistics (Score:1)
http://en.wikipedia.org/Boston_Red_Sox [wikipedia.org]
Re:Like most statistics (Score:1)
Thanks, though.
Re:Like most statistics (Score:1)
Re:Like most statistics (Score:2)
Future tense (Score:1)
Re:Future tense (Score:1)
That was a wonderfully cromulent write-up (Score:1, Funny)
Re:That was a wonderfully cromulent write-up (Score:1)
+1 Embiggens, preferably...
Just one question (Score:4, Funny)
What's next for these guys? An analysis of peoples' choices for celluar ring tones as they relate to their propensity to purchase expensive designer salad croutons? Stouffers is waiting anxiously for your results.
Re:Just one question (Score:2)
Re:Just one question (Score:2)
Visual Presentation Consultants (Score:2)
It was before my time, but selective lighting on TV might have influenced the Kennedy/Nixon results in 1960.
I seem to remember when pointing became a bad thing. This is why we now see awkward hand/finger positions and weird flinging of digits.
Makes sense (Score:4, Insightful)
This campaign really is about what GW did and whether you like it or not. Not so much about what either candidate plans to do the next four years.
I invested in my current stock AVN because they've done interesting things in the past, their stock history is good and because they had interesting current projects. I paid $1.76 a share and it's now above $3 a share. Their current project at the time is now showing real promise and getting some attention.
Re:Makes sense (Score:1)
This is probably why Kerry took such a big hit in the polls after the Swifties came out with their book and advertisements. People's character is demonstrated by what they have done. And character does matter, because it is the best indicator we have of how they will act in
Re:Makes sense (Score:2)
Statistics for fun and profit (Score:3, Interesting)
In this case, the future-tense references are kind of obvious if you ask me. People that talk about the future are often trying to detract attention from the present, and in those scenarios whether we're talking about a presidential election or a corporate report, tend to be reflective of whether or not the status quo is desireable or change is needed. Who needs a report to recognize this? If a company is doing badly, of course they're going to focus on the future. If a company is doing well, they'll be talking about their present circumstances. DUH.
As a result, I'm inclined to believe the outcome of this upcoming election is going to shatter these analysts predictions. In the business world, you can't really get away with lying about the present to the degree Bush has managed politically, and he's invented a new approach towards attempting to re-invent reality, which I'm not quite sure the majority of the public has bought, so his present tense propaganda is a completely different monster than any historical data these guys might have used for comparison.
Another correlation of the same kind (Score:1)
That doesn't mean that if you start driving on the left side of the road, that you start to become better at English, or if you'll learn English, that you slowly start to drift leftwards.
Re:Another correlation of the same kind (Score:1)
It will be a very short list.
Re:Another correlation of the same kind (Score:1)
in europe, there is a clear link between people that are good at speaking english and driving on the left side of the road.
but it doesn't mean that if you start driving on the left side of the road, that you suddenly start to be good at english.
there are probably thousands of similar links that can be found between all winners of elections. you could use this to make predictions, but the poster of the article wondered if people would change the language to influence the results.
changing
Re:Another correlation of the same kind (Score:1)
Re:Another correlation of the same kind (Score:1)
Video of Presidential Debates 1960-1984 (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd like to post this to suprnova but the upload page has timed out for me in the past 2 weeks. Maybe someone can try to put it on suprnova?
I ripped these older Presidential debates from various websites. It was a pain to get them. Dowload the torrent here [torrentbox.com] or here [torrentreactor.net] or here [jdandrpm.com]
Low quality Real Video files ripped from streamings from the web.
If you have other debates, 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, Presidential and/or VP, or higher-quality of the above, PLEASE POST!
what the (Score:1, Insightful)
Read carefully: scitex writes "Two economists, Rasa Karapandza and Milos Bozovic, from University Pompu Fabra, Barcelona wrote a very interesting paper "You Can Fool Some People Sometimes..." They say that on all US Presidential Elections from 1960, when presidential debates were held, won the candidate that used less future tense in the debate. First debate was televised in 1960. They predict that t
An Infinite selection of statistical data (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, well whatever. The thing that bugs me most about presidential candidates is that they always say "when I am president" and not "if I am elected president", even the ones who know they have no chance of winning (like Kucinich). I know their speech coaches or whoever tell them it makes them sound more assertive and confident and blah blah blah, but shut up already. NBC did this too, with their "MUST SEE THURSDAY" crap. It always sounded like a threat to me. Oh. Also, have they done an analysis of whether the person who repeats the same damn phrases over and over again the most is more likely to win? Because that seems to be the strategy of both camps.
Re:An Infinite selection of statistical data (Score:2)
It also makes you wonder why some (Kerry) haven't at least introduced the legislation that will enact what he's proposing on the campaign trail.
Re:An Infinite selection of statistical data (Score:2)
Re:An Infinite selection of statistical data (Score:1)
There are lots of these predictors (Score:1, Interesting)
I've lived through several elections by now. There is always a tiny New Hampshire which always predicts the election since 1918 (until this time); always a sports team that wins when the Democrats win (until this time); etc, etc.
In the modern world, we have a lot of things we can keep statics on; therefore, we would expect to find impressive simple coincidences. If you line up 10,000 people and they all start rolling die, and leave as soon as they get the first non-
more numerology and omens (Score:3, Insightful)
43 presidential elections (much less the 11 since 1960) are just not enough data points from which to extract any remotely significant analysis.
Re:more numerology and omens (Score:1)
we're gonna (Score:1)
Something I learned in English class: (Score:2)
We should choose our idols carefully... (Score:3, Funny)
Indeed (Score:2)
Well... (Score:1)
Ahh, now I'll never get elected.
Yes, but so what? (Score:1)
Yes. But so what? The lack of future tense isn't what's winning the elections, but merely a side effect of something else. That something else is easy to figure out: the average voter/consumer wants to know more about the practical here and now and less about the promises of the future.
Strange syntax (Score:1)
Linux & Open source paper trail voting machin (Score:2, Informative)
Is this intentional? (Score:1)
Did we switch to ebonics all of a sudden? Let me try my hand at it...
Yee-yah, the way they writes they reports is the shiznit! :D