Without seeing the responses to the "referendum", I am betting you have in the comments a huge amount of _committed_ "You are on crack; I will never stand for this." comments, a wide field of wishy washies giving conditionals, and an almost as wide field of supports on the lines of "I wouldn't use it, nor make my children use it, but meh, if somebody want's it..." and last and definitely least, a tiny hardcore segment of "Won't anyone think of the children!" -- Do I lose my bet?
On Sun, Sep 18, 2011 at 5:04 AM, Jussi-Ville Heiskanen <cimonavaro@gmail.com
wrote:
Without seeing the responses to the "referendum", I am betting you have in the comments a huge amount of _committed_ "You are on crack; I will never stand for this." comments, a wide field of wishy washies giving conditionals, and an almost as wide field of supports on the lines of "I wouldn't use it, nor make my children use it, but meh, if somebody want's it..." and last and definitely least, a tiny hardcore segment of "Won't anyone think of the children!" -- Do I lose my bet?
--
Am I reading that correctly to be a standard bell curve, slight shifted towards the left (i.e. more extreme no responses than extreme yes responses?)
Because that doesn't match the bimodal nature of the answers to the scored questions, which implies to me that they were not well written, as others have suggested. Or are we just speculating on the comments -- I didn't know they were released yet.
On Sun, Sep 18, 2011 at 9:16 AM, Dan Rosenthal swatjester@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, Sep 18, 2011 at 5:04 AM, Jussi-Ville Heiskanen <cimonavaro@gmail.com
wrote:
Without seeing the responses to the "referendum", I am betting you have in the comments a huge amount of _committed_ "You are on crack; I will never stand for this." comments, a wide field of wishy washies giving conditionals, and an almost as wide field of supports on the lines of "I wouldn't use it, nor make my children use it, but meh, if somebody want's it..." and last and definitely least, a tiny hardcore segment of "Won't anyone think of the children!" -- Do I lose my bet?
--
Am I reading that correctly to be a standard bell curve, slight shifted towards the left (i.e. more extreme no responses than extreme yes responses?)
Because that doesn't match the bimodal nature of the answers to the scored questions, which implies to me that they were not well written, as others have suggested. Or are we just speculating on the comments -- I didn't know they were released yet.
It appears there isn't a quotation that has currency in the English language of quite the same traction as "I know my folk of Pappenheim." by Martin Luther has in Finnish.
Indicating both intimate knowledge of the community and trust. To be clear, if I am off base, it is definitely time to fork.
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