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Related: About this forumFiveThirtyEight Gets it Wrong on Venezuela
FiveThirtyEight Gets it Wrong on Venezuela
Written by Mark Weisbrot
Friday, 04 April 2014 17:11
Nate Silver, who became famous for his use of polling data to accurately project U.S. elections, launched a new blog FiveThirtyEight.com last month. Its been off to a rough start, something between a disappointment and a disaster as Paul Krugman wrote soon after its launch, because of some pieces that handled data rather badly. Sloppy and casual opining with a bit of data used, as the old saying goes, the way a drunkard uses a lamppost for support, not illumination, says Krugman.
I leave it to the reader to decide whether the FiveThirtyEight article on March 17 by Dorothy Kronick on Venezuela fits this description. While it has become acceptable to publish almost anything about Venezuela, so long as it makes the government look bad, here at CEPR we apply the same standards to all products.
The thesis of the article is strange. Correctly noting that the political polarization in Venezuela is overwhelmingly along class lines, with the upper income groups tending to support the protests and lower-income Venezuelans supporting the government, she asks rhetorically why the divide? and answers:
They disagree over a political vision for their country in part because they measure Chavismo against two different benchmarks: Chavistas compare the present to Venezuelas pre-Chávez past, while the opposition contrasts the current economic situation with more recent developments in the rest of Latin America.
More:
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/the-americas-blog/538com-gets-it-wrong-on-venezuela
SamKnause
(13,108 posts)Hello Judi.
Hi, SamKnause! Good to see you.
blkmusclmachine
(16,149 posts)Judi Lynn
(160,593 posts)Had to recheck, only then did I realize I couldn't take the shortcut.
I was stunned, thinking I had led unsuspecting people to the wrong website.