Archive for the 'stats' Category

24
Apr

In God we trust, all others bring data

Since joining FraudWasteAbuse I’ve had several good article ideas, each of which was eventually tossed out for lack of data. (Sorry for the lame coffee article - it was all I had left!)

For example: a few months ago I read two unrelated articles - one that tallied the number of terrorism related deaths in the USA over the last ten years, the other that tallied the number of deaths caused by deer-vehicle crashes in the same time span. While reading the deer article I made a surprising connection: For nine of the last ten years, deer have killed more people on American soil than terrorists (2001 being the exception). For April 17th, I planed on writing an article about fear, death, and taxes based on this data.

Alas, I could not find the data needed to support the article and thus it was nixed. It was not due to a lack of effort.

And that made me wonder: Why is good data so hard to find? With the 2008 elections coming up and all the talk about universal health-care, the war on terror, illegal farm subsidies, and CO2 emissions; isn’t data - which provides us the ability to measure impact and effectiveness - of dire importance?

Without good data analysis to prove or disprove the merits of a particular policy, aren’t we destined to argue endlessly without truly comprehending the significance of our actions as a nation? Isn’t it likely that, without meaningful data, bad policies will continue and good policies will be eliminated simply because the policy fit or didn’t fit into some political ideal that can be proven wrong, but hasn’t been? Isn’t data the key to accountability?

So where is the data politicians keep spouting off about? I want it. Show it to me. I do not want ridiculously misleading statistics, true as they may be. I want raw data that I can analyze myself should I choose to do so. I want to see people like Hans Rosling analyzing the data and debunking myths caused by ignorance. I want to know the facts behind the facts, not perspectives on data designed to manipulate my opinion. Where is it?

Tiger got to hunt,
bird got to fly;
Man got to sit and wonder,
“Why, why, why?”

Tiger got to sleep,
bird got to land;
Man got to tell himself he understand.

-Kurt Vonnegut

09
Mar

Still can’t figure out those dang social bookmarking sites

I’ve been blogging for a few weeks now, and I’ve seen a slow but steady increase in my blog traffic. Until recently, my best day had seen 120 visits, and I considered that pretty good for a beginner. I typically averaged about 50 visits a day. However, when I decided to post some graffiti pictures I had taken on a trip to New York City, it became one of the top posts on Wordpress.

I attribute much of the success of the post to social bookmarking sites. My pictures have been a huge success on reddit.com and StumbledUpon (although traffic from here inexplicably came to a screeching halt for apparently no reason whatsoever), and I thank everyone for the awesome comments you’ve been leaving.

One site I can’t figure out it Digg.com. As of now the post is one of the top 10 on Wordpress and I’ve seen over 3,000 hits since yesterday. However traffic from Digg is nearly nonexistent even though it was the first site I submitted it to. I have yet to discover what makes a Digg submission take off.

One of these days I’m sure I’ll figure out its secrets.




 

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