Trump & the 'expected conclusion'

Probability experts and others who dabble in statistics like to talk about a expected conclusion.

An expected conclusion sounds Biblical to me, as in something from Proverbs or Jeremiah or even Revelation where the End is near, and the End is that which Yahweh or Mike Pence has ordained for each and every one of us. Therefore, the expected conclusion fits into the national political narrative of, one nation under God.

Statistically, the words expected conclusion are, for instance, used to compare the poll numbers on P. Trump before the Ukraine revelations and after, a time-span roughly from mid-August to the present, and to see that the poll numbers, that is P. Trump's approval rating, holding steady at 45%. 

The pollsters are making no predictions based on the expected conclusion of P. Trump's poll numbers or how the numbers will effect the outcome of the upcoming 2020 Presidential race, other than to use the term expected conclusion to suggest a likely outcome--that people who like Trump still like him, even liking, apparently, what's so dislikable about him.

I find this expected conclusion dislikable, and have constructed my own:

Trump pardons Michael Cohen who replaces Bill Barr as AG. Barr enters a witness protection program and testifies to Adam Schiff and Jim Jordan behind closed doors with complete legal immunity. The re-uniting of Team Trump & Cohen pay hush money to those troublesome strippers and to all female Republican senators who, however unlikely, could turn on the Administration, then pardon Paul Manafort who is immediately appointed Chairman of the Re-Elect Trump in 2020.

Brooks Roddan1 Comment