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User.45
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There are margins of error and if the poll is adequately powered it should not reflect the individual's mood, but it would still be impacted by forces that may transiently impact a large radius of geography, like a large storm. That said I would not be dismissive with polls. Republicans have poll armors because the electorate favors minority rule for them, and Trump's erratic behavior is reflected by a high rate of polling errors even after over adjustment by some pollsters.I get sick of polling and pollsters and people who predicate their next tweet (or legislative move) on some public or private poll they just laid eyes on. A poll is a snapshot in time and really we have no clue about the people who have responded to them past the actual answers to the particular questions.
The criticism of polls tends to be about the sample size or the non-random aspect of the polling or the slant or focus of the questions, but we don't see a lot of discussion about the humanity of the people taking the poll. I mean maybe someone had a fabulous day and got a raise in pay at work, or maybe they got fired, or maybe they quit, or maybe they were stuck in a car on I-95 with a cellphone that still worked when the pollster called...
,.. and yeah, what is "the economy" anyway? The supply chain that didn't bring your niece that doll on time, or the sleeper stock you bought bc some guy on the train correctly said to a buddy that it was about to take off, or the fact that your car needs a new alternator and you haven't got even gas money to get to a junkyard..,
But Biden is surely aware that he owns and is owned by "how things are" for the whole time he's in office. And like Bush 43, who did not invent hurricanes but understood that he owned and was owned by Hurricane Katrina, Biden does get it that it doesn't matter if "how things are" happen to lie beyond human intervention.
It would be nice though if people made more of a distinction along those lines.
As @SuperMatt says these don't necessarily reflect the truth, but perceptions.
I started fully ignoring the "economy" polls. Inflated valuation of the stock market may reflect the mood of the capitalist class, but those who aren't in it care more about the food, gas, housing, employment and childcare situation. Economy might mean something else for those who have security with all of these mentioned, but for most, a good economy means positive outlook to be able to afford all of these.My favorite news headline of stock market fan fiction written a couple weeks ago was “Market Recovers From Omicron Concerns”. WTF are they talking about? Nothing substantial happened with omnicrom in the last couple weeks to recover from, and in fact, if the market was in any way tethered to reality it would be doing worse due to omicron, not “recovered” from it several weeks ago.
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