Kaosium
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2010
- Messages
- 6,695
Except that Rasmussen did incredibly poorly in 2010 and just average in 2008. There's evidence all over the thread for this; I don't understand this need on your part to counterassert established fact.
Apologies, I spent a day having my life 'enriched' by three (adorable!) little rugrats, not much time for posting today.
I was unimpressed by the quality of that 'established fact' and offered this instead where Nate Silver's own methods suggests Rasmussen has been one of the most accurate pollsters. As for the other one from '10, are they attempting to compare (mostly) 4-500 respondent tracking polls with 1200 or 2700 sample polls? I wasn't paying any attention to that election--you know what I was doing online and it wasn't politics--but just looking back it does appear that Rasmussen was amongst--if not the first--to see the historic '10 election coming which is a helluva lot more valuable than any single poll.
Bet big, then. There's a predictions thread and a betting thread where people are just dying for someone to take Romney's side.
Just trying to help you out here.
*sigh* Seriously? This is weak sauce, dude.
It was 7.8 when he took office, and it was 7.8 last month. Of course, in Feburary of '09 it was 8.3 and spiked to 10 in October '09 as the recession hit full swing; you are welcome to assert that in a single month Obama was terrible for the economy, but let's be serious, shall we? We'll grant the non-representative cherry-pick of "7.8" for now.
Now, more importantly: do you know why it went up 0.1%?
People are starting looking for work again. It's a very good sign for the economy, in fact, because it represents confidence instead of discouragement, which is important. And the unemployment trend, of course, looks excellent for Obama.
What doesn't look good is the fact unemployment is still around where it was when he took office and there's still a huge number of LTE. When is the last time that number was so high? Even if some are now looking for work and being added back into the unemployment rolls, in the context of the government spending we added there's no reason to be happy about 7.9% unemployment at this juncture.
That money was spent to stimulate the economy, and had it given us ~4% growth rates and brought the unemployment rate back down to ~5% or whatever was projected I can see how it would have been worth it. Had he not insisted on that stimulus and we didn't double the (public) debt then it would be another thing entirely. However I just thought it funny that people were celebrating the fact that Barack Obama will go into the election with the highest unemployment rate I can think of off the top of my head (right before an election) since the Great Depression despite all the government spending and debt we invested in attempting to lower it.