highwaystar101 said:
Haha. I remember that poll, being so ashamed of my fellow countrymen. Didn't 24% also believe that Winston Churchill was fictional? Anyway, your bit about statistics kind of reminds of Doug Stanhope talking about polls on the news. Whereby basically a poll will come up on a complicated subject that is hard to understand, yet you will get 57% say yes, 40% say no and 3% say I don't know. In reality they all don't know and all it tells you is that 97% of people will give you a strong opinion based on something they know nothing about. And it's true, especially when it comes to Iran having nukes. It's a situation that even the brightest minds who's job it is to know, don't know. I would guess from reports I've read that their Uranium enrichment facilities are far too small to produce any nuke, let alone a large one or several. So it would be foolish for them to build one. But then again, I have absolutely no clue what I'm talking about like everyone else, I have not been to Iran and examined their Uranium enrichment programme. No one outside of the Iranian government has. The moral of the story is that public opinion polls should not be trusted. |
Quotes Newswipe
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“When we make some new announcement and if there is no positive initial reaction from the market, I try to think of it as a good sign because that can be interpreted as people reacting to something groundbreaking. ...if the employees were always minding themselves to do whatever the market is requiring at any moment, and if they were always focusing on something we can sell right now for the short term, it would be very limiting. We are trying to think outside the box.” - Satoru Iwata - This is why corporate multinationals will never truly understand, or risk doing, what Nintendo does.