Doesn't matter. Bus or no bus, if you can gather such crowds you're winning. All politicians try to bus people in, but it's hard or very expensive to do when you have no popularity.They're bussed in. Greater numbers of Americans believe Trump ought to be impeached, than believe he's doing a good job. — Wayfarer
>:O You're the guy who used to claim that Hillary Clinton is the best politician there is >:O >:O Just look at this:Damn right, I overestimated the intelligence of the US electorate. — Wayfarer
Same poll looks like. 1500 people is a minuscule tally. — Buxtebuddha
It is a recognised factor through history though. In China, for example, they called it divine mandate. Whoever held the divine mandate was simply unstoppable while holding it. In Europe we called it divine right to rule. All these are metaphors for interpreting the spirit of the age.This is just nonsense. — Michael
All these are metaphors — Agustino
He's a mendacious narcissist, an habitual liar, and totally incompetent to boot. The thing that really baffles me is that apparently intelligent people can somehow not see all this. — Wayfarer
It's ludicrous to think 1,500 gives only 2.58% margin of error (within 95% CI). To get these margins of error and the confidence intervals we make a ton of assumptions about the probability distribution of the population (such that we're dealing with a normal distribution where 2 standard deviations takes us to 95% confidence). Most of these assumptions are part of mathematical models that are necessary for us to make any kind of prediction whatsoever. However, there's no way - and I tell you this as a person who has worked with statistics and even took decisions based on them - that this is actually the case in reality.As I said above, a representative sample of 1,500 gives a 2.58% margin of error at a 95% confidence interval. — Michael
In Europe we called it divine right to rule. — Agustino
That's not true. In a democracy someone can stand up, claim divine right, and if the people support him, that would be evidence that he has divine right to rule. Now this doesn't require a church. The Chinese never had a church. But they understood that there are spiritual forces at play in the world.Divine right is something completely different. Monarchs may have claimed divine right, as the king might say that it is the direct will of God that I rule. But such a monarchy requires a powerful church and allegiance to that church, to support the claim. The concept can't apply in democracy where the rulers are elected by the people, and anyone claiming divine right would be regarded as a dictator. — Metaphysician Undercover
A dictator would be an illegitimate ruler. The point is precisely that such a ruler would be legitimate until he lost that legitimacy.Sounds like a dictator to me. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's not true. In a democracy someone can stand up, claim divine right, and if the people support him, that would be evidence that he has divine right to rule. — Agustino
Yeah, sure, there is no logical necessity that someone who has the support of the people has divine right to rule, BUT it's a very good indicator. I don't care about logical necessity. There's no logical necessity that the sun will rise tomorrow, and I have no problem believing it!You can't see the obvious non sequitur here? — Banno
Can you please explain how I've shifted my ground? I never claimed there was any logical necessity between the two statements. On the contrary, it is you who have strawmanned my point.So now you shift your ground.
It is somewhat astonishing that there are those who take your comments here seriously. — Banno
You haven't shown this. Sorry.That goes a long way to explaining your position, despite not watching television. — Banno
That's not true. In a democracy someone can stand up, claim divine right, and if the people support him, that would be evidence that he has divine right to rule. — Agustino
Well yeah, exactly. Like you always do. Run away. That certainly means you're right. That's how crazy some people are. They think if they don't argue they're right... *shakes head*No; there is no point in engaging with you. I'll leave these few comments here for others to consider. — Banno
It can be both.Do you think that this is an indication of divine right, or a will to dictatorship? — Metaphysician Undercover
Your behaviour towards me is identical to your behaviour towards Trump. You sit there throwing your hands in the air that it's astonishing that Trump won... well, if you stop being such a self-righteous person, you may start to see that it's not at all so astonishing. But of course, you won't. You'll keep on, never questioning yourself.It is somewhat astonishing that there are those who take your comments here seriously. — Banno
They think if they don't argue they're right... — Agustino
is a non sequitur, since it does not follow from the support of the mob that one has divine right.In a democracy someone can stand up, claim divine right, and if the people support him, that would be evidence that he has divine right to rule
Your behaviour towards me is identical to your behaviour towards Trump. — Agustino
It's ludicrous to think 1,500 gives only 2.58% margin of error (within 95% CI). — Agustino
Not when the population is 320 million
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