MOAV "criterion"?
Saari at aol.com
Saari at aol.com
Sat Feb 22 03:57:30 PST 1997
>D- It is of course possible to have a Don't Care column---
> Yes No Don't Care
>A x
>B x
>C x
>
>If so, should the Don't Care votes be half yes, half no votes such that a
>candidate may have a vote of
>40 Yes, 3O No, 30 Don't Care
>which would become
>55 Yes, 45 No ?
A vote of "Decline" (aka "Neither") could have several possible reasons -
"don't care" is only one of several, so I would prefer use of the term
"Decline" meaning "Decline to support or oppose." This is only a nit, but I
think it is important to use voting terminology which is as accurate as
possible to avoid misleading or confusing people.
For that matter, I now prefer "Suppose" and "Oppose" over Yes/No. The word
"No" is actually pretty ambiguous. (Does "No" mean merely "No I do not
support." or does it mean the stronger "No I am actively opposed."? It's
unclear which.) "Oppose" is crystal-clear.
Functionally, Decline can probably be viewed as exactly halfway between
Support and Oppose. Although I can envision plausible arguments in other
directions. But turning a Decline vote into "half-yes plus half-no" seems to
be adding complexity for no net purpose.
And with other scoring systems, it introduces a level of distortion. For
example, assume a "ratio" scoring system. Then 6 Support, 1 Oppose, 20
Decline would have a support/oppose ratio of 6:1. But if we turn the 20
Decline votes into half-yes, half-no, then the final result is 6+10=16
Support, 1+10=11 Oppose which changes the ratio to 16:11 - a substantial
alteration.
So simpler and better to simply not count Decline votes, IMHO.
Mike S
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