keano_afc wrote: » Its an unreasonable and inaccurate assumption to present a % figure as fact in a national newspaper, when the reality is not the case.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » unreasonable in your opinion. You dont know that the reality is not the case.
keano_afc wrote: » So you think when printing the results of a survey newspapers should pluck figures from their ar$e and cite "reasonable assumption"?
ohnonotgmail wrote: » The figure wasnt plucked from their arse. It was plucked from the people who responded. The IMT know which of the respondents are doctors because they would be on their free list. So it is a reasonable assumption.
NuMarvel wrote: » Oh, the irony of an anti-repealer complaining about inaccurate percentages being cited as fact on a public platform...
keano_afc wrote: » Its got to be up there with pro-Repealers who dispute these percentages when presented by certain groups, being perfectly happy to accept the same thing in a national newspaper.
NuMarvel wrote: » There's evidence to back up the problems with the statistics being cited by anti-repealers. On the other hand, I'm still waiting for you, or anyone else, to cite evidence of the problems with this survey.
keano_afc wrote: » The survey says 75% of doctors say X. This is a lie. Thats the problem.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » Because it can only say this definitively if they polled every single doctor in the country? By this standard, pretty much every headline on an opinion poll news story is a lie...
keano_afc wrote: » Well no, because opinion polls generally say who they are polling. Saying 75% of doctors say X is a lie because they have no evidence that only doctors were polled.
Howard Tasteless Bank wrote: » Welp, successfully scuppered any discussion of yet more evidence showing that medical professionals consistently support repeal, so job done. If it wasn't that it would have been something else. Phrasing of the question, who asked it, whether it was in fact 61.3% and not 62%, what day of the week it was, if the respondents had been personally victimised by Una Mulally. It happens every survey.
keano_afc wrote: » That we're led to believe it was a poll of doctors. It was a poll of people who read a magazine, which could be anybody.
Delirium wrote: » you know many plumbers that subscribe to the Irish Medical Times?
mrkiscool2 wrote: » Sorry, there is no argument here, at all. If the mother's life is at risk due to her pregnancy an abortion should be performed immediately. There is no debate here. Risking her life for the sake of a fetus is not acceptable, especially when the trauma the woman is going through could kill the fetus anyway.
seamus wrote: » Considering the survey won't even be published until tomorrow, you're making a lot of declarations about what it does and doesn't say. Where's your evidence that it's a lie?
Candamir wrote: » FFS The survey asks medical doctors what their opinion is on a subject. ‘Are you a medical doctor’ - yes/no ‘Do you Support 12 week access.....’ - yes/no/don’t know At some point you have to either believe (a) that people who answer surveys are generally honest, and the survey is therefore an accurate representation of their feelings, or (b)that they’re telling lies and therefore surveys are useless. If you believe (b) then disregard all survey/poll/non concrete evidence from here on out. Including pretty much everything you see on the various prolife posters. You can also include everything that comes out of the CSO, as that’s also only a survey. If you keep going down this path, you’ll soon find you can’t really believe anything much at all!
expectationlost wrote: » the cso double check a sample of their data