Teeeechnically that's more a graph fail than a math fail. It's not unreasonable that some voters may have been willing to vote for more than one candidate, if the question was structured as multiple choice rather than pick one.
I figured they meant that people would be willing to back multiple candidates (hell, most would probably blindly vote for anyone that flew under the GOP banner), but in that case, a Venn Diagram would have been the best choice.
Teeeechnically that's more a graph fail than a math fail. It's not unreasonable that some voters may have been willing to vote for more than one candidate, if the question was structured as multiple choice rather than pick one.
That is great! What a bunch of dummies.
ReplyDeleteTeeeechnically that's more a graph fail than a math fail.
ReplyDeleteIt's not unreasonable that some voters may have been willing to vote for more than one candidate, if the question was structured as multiple choice rather than pick one.
Still dumb, though.
I'd say graphing properly is a math skill.
ReplyDeleteI figured they meant that people would be willing to back multiple candidates (hell, most would probably blindly vote for anyone that flew under the GOP banner), but in that case, a Venn Diagram would have been the best choice.
Teeeechnically that's more a graph fail than a math fail.
ReplyDeleteIt's not unreasonable that some voters may have been willing to vote for more than one candidate, if the question was structured as multiple choice rather than pick one.
Still dumb, though.
That is great! What a bunch of dummies.
ReplyDelete