Good point. Although I think Cohn's speciality is more valuable to me here. I came away from the Silver piece when I first read it with the problem merely being a fixed population of voters; the Cohn piece was much more illuminating since it showed the specifics of how that pre-condition has been affecting all kinds of aggregation methods. So Silver was the early warning, but Cohn had the nitty-gritty.
I'm just used to Silver providing that--they seem spread pretty thin. As you point out, you have to specialize in something, though...
I'm just used to Silver providing that--they seem spread pretty thin. As you point out, you have to specialize in something, though...