Posted on 02/02/2016 10:30:41 AM PST by Talisker
DES MOINES, Iowa - One of the most bizarre details to emerge from Monday's Iowa caucuses was that in six Democratic counties, the ownership of six delegates was decided by a coin flip.
A single delegate remained unassigned at the end of caucusing in two precincts in Des Moines, one precinct in Ames, one in Newton, one in West Branch and one in Davenport, The Des Moines Register reported.
In all six instances, the coin toss was won by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.
There may have been more coin tosses, but those are the ones we know about for now.
Now, get ready to do some math.
In a single coin toss, the probability of calling the toss correctly is 50 percent, or one in two. Heads or tails.
But the probably of winning every flip out of six flips is one in 64, or 1.56 percent.
The online study tool âCoin Toss Probability Calculatorâ has a really intense formula that explains why, but the bottom line is, the probabilities stack on each other.
Youâre 50 percent likely to win one coin flip. But youâre only 25 percent likely to win two consecutive coin flips, because there are now twice as many possible outcomes. So bump that up to six coin flips, and your chances of winning them all are slim.
Clintonâs final statewide delegate count was 699.57, according to the Iowa Democratic Party. Sandersâ was 695.49.
Oh, I’m sure there is a technique that allows an experienced coin tosser to determine higher odds for a specific outcome.
Which is as much a rigged game as dealing from the bottom of the deck, loaded dice and having the magnet in the roulette wheel.
So just rework the problem fairly. Give half of the flips to Hillary and Half to Bernie. Then who wins?
But unless the same person was tossing the same coin and both side picked the same side each time it would not do any good.
That is why I asked if that was the case.
If six different people tossed six different coins in six different locations and the side picking was random then the chance was 50/50.
This isn’t all that improbable. The Carolina Panthers once had a season in which they lost 11 consecutive coin tosses.
She represents the War Party. They just win, baby. No dishonor in winning, apparently.
She did not win this one?
Hardin Township Johnson County Iowa 2016 Caucus
Nope, Bernie won that one.
Then what am I missing? Wasn’t the media reporting the Beast won all six coin tosses?
Hasn’t done that well since her cattle futures investing “luck”.
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