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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 12:12:53 GMT, Frogleg > wrote:
>On Wed, 28 Jan 2004 17:18:38 -0500, Nancy Young > wrote: > >>... you know the rest. > >The usual quote is "There are lies, damn[ed] lies, and statistics," >variously attributed to Mark Twain who attributed it to Disraeli, and >Churchill, who may have also used the phrase. >> >>I keep seeing all of these quotes, mostly here, about how many times >>people eat fast food, how many Americans are obese, etc. > >Looking up the quote, I came across reference to a book titled "Damned >Lies and Statistics" by Joel Best which looks pretty interesting. > >http://tinyurl.com/3cyjy > >The questions you ask are worth asking. Where *do* these numbers come >from? How are they meaningful? Obviously the 'researchers' don't ask >every single person (American?) how many times he/she ate in a fast >food joint. What was their sample population? Urban? Rural? Age? >Avaliability of alternatives? Many statistics are just re-pubished >from dubious source. A lot of footnotes and references does not a >truth make. you might look at 'how to lie with statistics' as well. your pal, blake |
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