jonottawa, on 2012-September-11, 15:02, said:
"When I was a young man about to go out into the world, my father says to me a very valuable thing. He says to me like this... "Son," the old guy says, "I am sorry that I am not able to bank roll you to a very large start, but not having any potatoes which to give you, I am now going to stake you to some very valuable advice. One of these days in your travels, a guy is going to come to you and show you a nice, brand new deck of cards on which the seal has not yet been broken. This man is going to offer to bet you that he can make the jack of spades jump out of that deck and squirt cider in your ear. Now son, you do not take this bet, for as sure as you stand there, you are going to wind up with an earful of cider."
The wisdom of Sky Masterton eh
(1)
The reason intrade is closer to sixty, and that Nate is close to 85, is that nates methods are basically the answer to "What would the result be if the election were held tomorrow". In the real world a lot of stuff can happen between now and the election, and that can change the odds so much as to make that prediction irrelevant.
For example, suppose that the economy/stock market tanks in october again, like it did last year. If that happens that would move the odds a lot I would imagine. I don;t think this is a small possibility at all. I would say its at least 30% that we see another stock market crash like last october, and given the relation between stock markets and economies, that would be very bad for his election chances. There is still time for another debt ceiling stand off, that could hurt either side in a big way.
Anyway, my main point is that Nate is usually right, but the data he is using to come up with his prediction can change a lot between now and election day, in which case his % win will change a lot, because his % is what is the win chance for an election held tomorrow, rather than in november.
(1) This is a quote for guy's and dolls character Sky Masterton, in case anyone missed it.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper