...I am very exciting about observing and predicting swing states at the moment (so no science news in my life for a few days). After all, we cannot escape what is going on in the world around us. As a relatively normal person (or trying to be), I do not believe in either-or outcome would result in immediate tragedy of sorts, if at all, but I am open to be convinced otherwise. So - quick focus on the data - how am I analysing different states?
(1) What percentage of votes is left to count? (Beware - this is estimation to begin with.)
(2) How many votes are there left to count vs how many advantage votes each candidate has now?
(3) What counties can contribute the most of remaining votes (very important!!!)?
(4) Where are those counties leaning towards?
(5) How would final voting look in those counties if we apply current trending (early mail-in counted first, in-person counted second, remaining late-mail in counted last)?
I am actually having fun predicting. Let me know if you have other tricks when predicting!!!
This was a very late recording contrasting two news articles about Omicron - so called "Covid super-strain".
I know I haven't been around lately...work...life...However, the 12-years-old clip popped into my feed and I wanted to share it. The reason? This clip provides the great basic understanding into what are the issues with so-called "evidence" related to anthropogenic (human-induced) climate change and the lack of logic when it comes to the interpretation of such evidence. The sad reality is that even after 12 years from this clip, we are still forced to endure nonsensical conclusions that hurricanes hitting Florida are caused by big bad climate change.
The mainstream media is doubling down on the alarmism, and it is not hard to guess why. However, to be fair, consider my little observation an educated guess, an opinion, rather than the fact. Time will show whether I am right.
(1) 'Climate change affects everyone': Europe battles wildfires in intense heat by Reuters (https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/spain-portugal-battle-wildfires-heatwaves-scorch-southern-europe-2022-07-17/)
If you spent time in Southern Europe, Mediterranean, during summer season - July and August in particular - you probably know that heat-induced wildfires are nothing new. In fact, they are quite common and remarkably devastating for the affected communities, and I have witnessed several in person. Most of the time, the wildfires occur due to heat igniting grasses, especially in the areas where there are broken glass or broken bottles. The glass serves as an amplifier for the sun rays, especially, in the vicinity of dry grasses, or even dry pine needles, and as ...