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by defrost
497 days ago
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Their specific claim is odd, it's that the record of every machine in the county showed an expected random pattern of votes for the first 300 or so votes .. ( "random" here means more chaotic and unpredictable ) after which there was a more correlated bias toward one candidate that had a stong early trend toward a particular outcome (consistent clumping with little bounce). The assertion is that this rarely seen in "real free voting data". In a single picture: https://img1.wsimg.com/isteam/ip/9087f51c-d3bd-4002-9943-797... |
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These analysts acknowledge the "deep red areas" explanation in their pdf, but they handwave it away in an unconvincing way: they say that the same effect doesn't occur for election day voting, only the early vote. But most voting in Nevada doesn't happen on Election Day. According to the data they present, every single voting machine in Clark County processed less than 150 election-day votes, with most well under 100. That is, they'd all be well to the left of the dotted line. So even in the vote-manipulation scenario, these analysts should expect to be seeing no separation effect for the election-day vote. Its absence tells us nothing.