Zelandakh, on 2017-August-10, 15:06, said:
I was planning to just let this pass, but since you responded I will as well. I find the statement bizarre. To have a precise figure such as 73% implies that there is a very well-defined center position. Without even getting onto the differences between an American centrist and a European centrist, I could not begin to pin this down. In some post someone, perhaps you I don't recall, suggested that my views are to the left of the American center and to the right of the European center. Quite possibly this is so, at any rate it has some meaning and I can imagine evidence that would indicate whether it is so or is not so. But to simply say that 73% of Americans are left of center shouts for the response "What center?". To put it another way, if we are only speaking of the American center then I would think it is almost tautological to say that some glob, maybe 30% of Americans are in the American center, about 35% of Americans are to the left of the American center, and about 35 % of Americans are to the right of the American center. Replace "American" by "French" throughout and I would expect the same. to be true. It is tough to understand what even could be meant by saying that 73% of Americans are to the left of the American center. It sounds impossible on the face of it. And if we go beyond the American shores to define "center", then how far beyond? The Samoan Islands?
I thought maybe the statement was tongue in cheek, intended to ridicule statistical assertions. Statistical assertions are often deserving of ridicule. We look forward to the time when everyone's standard of living will be above the national average.