What world are you living in? Did you even watch the election? Anybody who stayed up all night and watched that election knows the rig was in. The evidence has been shown everywhere. You’re just repeating propaganda mainstream media lines at this point and it’s pathetic. Over 60% of Americans believe the 2020 election outcome was changed due to fraud. You’re in the minority along with the likes of Rachel maddow, Anderson cooper, etc.
Except not a single court agreed with you, or any other election results denier. There is no evidence, what you saw, your so-called “evidence has been shown everywhere”? That was actually just the fevered imaginings of your conspiracy-tainted brain, and the deluded imaginings of other election deniers like yourself. As for the % of Americans believing this lie, yes, that’s a huge problem in a democracy that really needs its citizens to trust their elections to be fair and well run. So these unfortunate deluded beliefs simply demonstrate what I’ve been saying all along: Trump’s Big Lie is perhaps the most irresponsible action by an American president deliberately damaging his country in our nation’s history. And that, bunky, is a whole lot closer to the facts of our recent history than any of the nonsense you post….
In this paper, we consider several widely disseminated claims purporting to call into question the 2020 US presidential election result. We focus on statistical claims, i.e., claims that are based on allegedly anomalous patterns in the official vote counts. The common logic of these claims is that some aspect of the 2020 result would be highly unlikely or even impossible if the election had been properly administered. We performed an extensive search to identify the most pervasive such claims appearing in social media posts, expert witness testimony, and research papers.
* Our purpose in this paper is to address several of the most pervasive statistical claims in one place and using a common conceptual framework.
We conclude that each of the statistical claims we consider fails in one of two ways. In some instances, accurate claims are made about the election results but they are not actually inconsistent with a free and fair election. In other instances, the supposedly anomalous fact about the 2020 election result turns out to be incorrect.