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Electoral College Calculus (washingtonpost.com) by dmv at 1:09 pm EDT, Oct 27, 2004 |
] Tuesday's election will probably be decided in 11 states ] where polls currently show the race too tight to predict ] a winner. And, assuming the other states go as predicted, ] a computer analysis finds no fewer than 33 combinations ] in which those 11 states could divide to produce a 269 to ] 269 electoral tie. OMG |
Electoral College Calculus (washingtonpost.com) by k at 9:51 am EDT, Oct 28, 2004 |
] Tuesday's election will probably be decided in 11 states ] where polls currently show the race too tight to predict ] a winner. And, assuming the other states go as predicted, ] a computer analysis finds no fewer than 33 combinations ] in which those 11 states could divide to produce a 269 to ] 269 electoral tie. OMG [ All rather unlikely as the article notes, but also, make no mistake (also noted within), a Tie is a win for Bush, as the House is (R) right now. -k] |
Electoral College Calculus (washingtonpost.com) by Rattle at 8:21 pm EDT, Oct 28, 2004 |
] None of these scenarios is likely to occur next week, but ] neither is any of them far-fetched. Tuesday's election ] will probably be decided in 11 states where polls ] currently show the race too tight to predict a winner. ] And, assuming the other states go as predicted, a ] computer analysis finds no fewer than 33 combinations in ] which those 11 states could divide to produce a 269 to ] 269 electoral tie. This election is better then football, the American or European version. The American version being the one with more complex rules. Lets just hope there are no errors.. Errr.. That's baseball. Fouls? Calling foul? What the fuck do you do in football? Do I go to DC and toss a flag in the reflection pool? What color is the flag? How does this work? |
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