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  4. UKIP get 4 million votes but only one seat

UKIP get 4 million votes but only one seat

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  • D Dr Gadgit

    Yes mate "their is no weighting involved in either system" Laws of averages is a crazy theory made up by the jesus army PR=FPTP , No weighting and you say that i just don't get it. 2,700,000 -------------- X B=8 31,000,000 AND 3,600,000 -------------- X B=1 31,000,000 Please transpose 'B'

    B Offline
    B Offline
    Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
    wrote on last edited by
    #112

    explain how the weighting works in a FPTP system then what is affected by the application od a weighting, you claim it is so, so prove it the law of averages is a perfectly good law if it was relevant but it isn't, the laws of gravity is also perfectly good but it has about as much relevance to this situation because a law is irrelevant in this case does not imply that the law is flawed only its application could you please explain when voter distribution was introduced as far as I was aware it was purely by geographical location and not % of votes/party within a location work this example will you 3 parties, A,B and C two seats seat 1, Party A get 10 votes, party B gets 9, party C gets none seat 2 , party A gets none, party B gets 9 and party C gets 10 which seat does Party B win? by the laws of average they should have won one if not both so if the laws apply then they must have won at least one, so which one and why? which seat does the weighting apply to?

    You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

    D 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • D Dr Gadgit

      Yes mate "their is no weighting involved in either system" Laws of averages is a crazy theory made up by the jesus army PR=FPTP , No weighting and you say that i just don't get it. 2,700,000 -------------- X B=8 31,000,000 AND 3,600,000 -------------- X B=1 31,000,000 Please transpose 'B'

      C Offline
      C Offline
      chriselst
      wrote on last edited by
      #113

      I don't know why people are still arguing with you on this as you are so far wrong and completely failing to understand why I cannot see it ever changing, you remind me of Captain Redbeard Rum "There are two schools of thought on that, I say it isn't and everyone else says it is". Having said that I'm going to have one last go. The numbers you keep using, the numbers above, they are entirely meaningless numbers, they are not used for anything, they are just added up at the end once everything is decided because people like to have statistics they can use to try and make a point. Statistics are utterly meaningless, they show everything and prove nothing. Voting takes place, is counted, and seats are awarded at a constituency level. The results and numbers at each constituency are completely and entirely unrelated to the results and numbers overall, they have no influence over each other, the totals when calculated at the end do not relate at all. There is no luck, no average, no repeating patterns, simply several hundred instances of the same things being done at the same time, but the same things being done by different things to different things. If a thousand dogs choose their favourite food from a selection of 8 types (one of which is called Tory, one Lib Dem, one UKIP, etc) at the same time as twenty thousand cats choose their favourite food from 4 types (named as before but different foods) and one hundred chickens choose their favourite from 5 types (and again), and you have tens more animals and food types then you will not end up with the totals percentage of votes and the total favourites for each name matching up at all. That is effectively how the UK General Election takes place, different numbers of different people vote for their favourite from a different set of candidates.

      Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

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      • B Bergholt Stuttley Johnson

        explain how the weighting works in a FPTP system then what is affected by the application od a weighting, you claim it is so, so prove it the law of averages is a perfectly good law if it was relevant but it isn't, the laws of gravity is also perfectly good but it has about as much relevance to this situation because a law is irrelevant in this case does not imply that the law is flawed only its application could you please explain when voter distribution was introduced as far as I was aware it was purely by geographical location and not % of votes/party within a location work this example will you 3 parties, A,B and C two seats seat 1, Party A get 10 votes, party B gets 9, party C gets none seat 2 , party A gets none, party B gets 9 and party C gets 10 which seat does Party B win? by the laws of average they should have won one if not both so if the laws apply then they must have won at least one, so which one and why? which seat does the weighting apply to?

        You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

        D Offline
        D Offline
        Dr Gadgit
        wrote on last edited by
        #114

        "Go to Parentexplain how the weighting works in a FPTP system then what is affected by the application od a weighting, you claim it is so, so prove it " if you plot FPTP on a chart then you will see a logrithic curve and PR would be almost a stright line. Towards the top of the FPTP chart the factor between Labour and Cons in relation to votes is quite closes (Few errors 50/50 if you flick a coin 1bn times) At the bottom of the chart you have UKIP and Lib-Dems but because the number of votes/seats are low then the factors can have much wider swings (Toss a coin ten times, could get ten heads) The distribution of votes and constituency size are not big factors towards the top of the chart (Reds are from up north, blues down south) but play a bigger role towards the bottom of the chart so yes, more prone to errors. This still does not account for the eight to one win with less votes and i am sorry that i cannot help you anymore b-cus me dinner is cooking

        B 1 Reply Last reply
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        • D Dr Gadgit

          "Go to Parentexplain how the weighting works in a FPTP system then what is affected by the application od a weighting, you claim it is so, so prove it " if you plot FPTP on a chart then you will see a logrithic curve and PR would be almost a stright line. Towards the top of the FPTP chart the factor between Labour and Cons in relation to votes is quite closes (Few errors 50/50 if you flick a coin 1bn times) At the bottom of the chart you have UKIP and Lib-Dems but because the number of votes/seats are low then the factors can have much wider swings (Toss a coin ten times, could get ten heads) The distribution of votes and constituency size are not big factors towards the top of the chart (Reds are from up north, blues down south) but play a bigger role towards the bottom of the chart so yes, more prone to errors. This still does not account for the eight to one win with less votes and i am sorry that i cannot help you anymore b-cus me dinner is cooking

          B Offline
          B Offline
          Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
          wrote on last edited by
          #115

          nope that's doesn't explain how it effects the election of a MP only explains why the use of this in this situations is invalid, you cannot apply analysis at a macro level and apply the result to the micro, if you new your stuff you would realise this again I will state the problem Parties A,B,C seat 1 A gets 10 votes, b gets 9 votes c gets none seat 2 A gets no votes, B gets 9 votes c gets 10 which seat does B win? its a simple question, applying your logic which seat does b win? or if you prefer which seat does b not lose? explain how your argument works in this question and why B would actual have won?

          You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • C chriselst

            I don't know why people are still arguing with you on this as you are so far wrong and completely failing to understand why I cannot see it ever changing, you remind me of Captain Redbeard Rum "There are two schools of thought on that, I say it isn't and everyone else says it is". Having said that I'm going to have one last go. The numbers you keep using, the numbers above, they are entirely meaningless numbers, they are not used for anything, they are just added up at the end once everything is decided because people like to have statistics they can use to try and make a point. Statistics are utterly meaningless, they show everything and prove nothing. Voting takes place, is counted, and seats are awarded at a constituency level. The results and numbers at each constituency are completely and entirely unrelated to the results and numbers overall, they have no influence over each other, the totals when calculated at the end do not relate at all. There is no luck, no average, no repeating patterns, simply several hundred instances of the same things being done at the same time, but the same things being done by different things to different things. If a thousand dogs choose their favourite food from a selection of 8 types (one of which is called Tory, one Lib Dem, one UKIP, etc) at the same time as twenty thousand cats choose their favourite food from 4 types (named as before but different foods) and one hundred chickens choose their favourite from 5 types (and again), and you have tens more animals and food types then you will not end up with the totals percentage of votes and the total favourites for each name matching up at all. That is effectively how the UK General Election takes place, different numbers of different people vote for their favourite from a different set of candidates.

            Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

            B Offline
            B Offline
            Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
            wrote on last edited by
            #116

            I think he has a square peg, a round hole and a hammer

            You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • C chriselst

              I don't know why people are still arguing with you on this as you are so far wrong and completely failing to understand why I cannot see it ever changing, you remind me of Captain Redbeard Rum "There are two schools of thought on that, I say it isn't and everyone else says it is". Having said that I'm going to have one last go. The numbers you keep using, the numbers above, they are entirely meaningless numbers, they are not used for anything, they are just added up at the end once everything is decided because people like to have statistics they can use to try and make a point. Statistics are utterly meaningless, they show everything and prove nothing. Voting takes place, is counted, and seats are awarded at a constituency level. The results and numbers at each constituency are completely and entirely unrelated to the results and numbers overall, they have no influence over each other, the totals when calculated at the end do not relate at all. There is no luck, no average, no repeating patterns, simply several hundred instances of the same things being done at the same time, but the same things being done by different things to different things. If a thousand dogs choose their favourite food from a selection of 8 types (one of which is called Tory, one Lib Dem, one UKIP, etc) at the same time as twenty thousand cats choose their favourite food from 4 types (named as before but different foods) and one hundred chickens choose their favourite from 5 types (and again), and you have tens more animals and food types then you will not end up with the totals percentage of votes and the total favourites for each name matching up at all. That is effectively how the UK General Election takes place, different numbers of different people vote for their favourite from a different set of candidates.

              Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

              D Offline
              D Offline
              Dr Gadgit
              wrote on last edited by
              #117

              "Voting takes place, is counted, and seats are awarded at a constituency level. The results and numbers at each constituency are completely and entirely unrelated to the results and numbers overall" Yes agree and it's a bit like playing the pools each week, just one winner, last weeks results are nothing to do with todays results. "Statistics are utterly meaningless" So no alarm bells would ring with you if 649 white people won over 3 years and only one black man won because after all blacks are more into basketball and it could be argued that black people have less money to spend on betting. I would not know the forula to calculate the odds of this happening in real life but some people will even if they won't all agree on values for the factors. "There is no luck" So no luck if UKIP just managed get beaten by a small margin on 30 seats but Lib-dems lost big time or just somehow managed to creeped past the post eight times to win. Too me a better name for "luck" might be a probaility factor, laws of averages or just a case of vote fixing, it does go on you know. Sorry, gone ,Dinner

              C B 2 Replies Last reply
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              • D Dr Gadgit

                "Voting takes place, is counted, and seats are awarded at a constituency level. The results and numbers at each constituency are completely and entirely unrelated to the results and numbers overall" Yes agree and it's a bit like playing the pools each week, just one winner, last weeks results are nothing to do with todays results. "Statistics are utterly meaningless" So no alarm bells would ring with you if 649 white people won over 3 years and only one black man won because after all blacks are more into basketball and it could be argued that black people have less money to spend on betting. I would not know the forula to calculate the odds of this happening in real life but some people will even if they won't all agree on values for the factors. "There is no luck" So no luck if UKIP just managed get beaten by a small margin on 30 seats but Lib-dems lost big time or just somehow managed to creeped past the post eight times to win. Too me a better name for "luck" might be a probaility factor, laws of averages or just a case of vote fixing, it does go on you know. Sorry, gone ,Dinner

                C Offline
                C Offline
                chriselst
                wrote on last edited by
                #118

                Dr Gadgit wrote:

                Sorry, gone ,Dinner

                You're undoubtedly out to lunch. Stop looking at the totals. Totals aren't real. If you want to show it is a fix then you need to look at each constituency on a stand alone basis and explain why UKIP should have one it or the Lib Dems shouldn't. Spoiler alert: The answer every time is because fewer people voted for UKIP than someone else, or more people voted Lib Dem than someone else, depending on which constituency you are looking at (Clacton excepted, but then Clacton generally should be).

                Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

                B 2 Replies Last reply
                0
                • D Dr Gadgit

                  "Voting takes place, is counted, and seats are awarded at a constituency level. The results and numbers at each constituency are completely and entirely unrelated to the results and numbers overall" Yes agree and it's a bit like playing the pools each week, just one winner, last weeks results are nothing to do with todays results. "Statistics are utterly meaningless" So no alarm bells would ring with you if 649 white people won over 3 years and only one black man won because after all blacks are more into basketball and it could be argued that black people have less money to spend on betting. I would not know the forula to calculate the odds of this happening in real life but some people will even if they won't all agree on values for the factors. "There is no luck" So no luck if UKIP just managed get beaten by a small margin on 30 seats but Lib-dems lost big time or just somehow managed to creeped past the post eight times to win. Too me a better name for "luck" might be a probaility factor, laws of averages or just a case of vote fixing, it does go on you know. Sorry, gone ,Dinner

                  B Offline
                  B Offline
                  Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #119

                  you are trying to make your view fit the facts instead of making your decision based on those facts you make up scenarios that support your view without considering if they fit the facts, if in your story the numbers were correct would it be a factor if only 1 black man did the pools against 1000 white men? how about stop and search, if 120 people were stopped and searched in a town after a crime and that 119 were white(insert colour of choice here) would that indicate bias? or would the fact that they were looking for a white (insert previously selected colour here) criminal be a factor? again I will state the actual situation parties a,b,c seat 1 party A 10 votes, party b 9 votes, party c 0 votes seat 2 party A 0 votes, party B 9 votes, party C 10 votes which seat(s) does B win? your rules, explain why you think B wins a seat?

                  You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • C chriselst

                    Dr Gadgit wrote:

                    Sorry, gone ,Dinner

                    You're undoubtedly out to lunch. Stop looking at the totals. Totals aren't real. If you want to show it is a fix then you need to look at each constituency on a stand alone basis and explain why UKIP should have one it or the Lib Dems shouldn't. Spoiler alert: The answer every time is because fewer people voted for UKIP than someone else, or more people voted Lib Dem than someone else, depending on which constituency you are looking at (Clacton excepted, but then Clacton generally should be).

                    Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #120

                    from all accounts if what's his name wasn't been the incumbent he would also have lost

                    You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • C chriselst

                      Dr Gadgit wrote:

                      Sorry, gone ,Dinner

                      You're undoubtedly out to lunch. Stop looking at the totals. Totals aren't real. If you want to show it is a fix then you need to look at each constituency on a stand alone basis and explain why UKIP should have one it or the Lib Dems shouldn't. Spoiler alert: The answer every time is because fewer people voted for UKIP than someone else, or more people voted Lib Dem than someone else, depending on which constituency you are looking at (Clacton excepted, but then Clacton generally should be).

                      Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.

                      B Offline
                      B Offline
                      Bergholt Stuttley Johnson
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #121

                      he doesn't get it does he, he is determined to apply his warped logic to it whether it fits or not. basically I don't think he can except that under current rules UKIP didn't get the support it needed in enough areas to gain the seats, but he alone seems to miss the point that only a change to the system would have got them those seats and that is unlikely to happen the basic fact he misses every time is that the higher number always wins the seat and that is where UKIP failed and as you say the total vote is as about as relevant as the number of penguins in the artic come to think of it the weather probably had far bigger impact on the vote than anything he has come up with

                      You cant outrun the world, but there is no harm in getting a head start Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.

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