So, not a prediction.
Everything is a prediction. Magnitudes, motives, the participants, time ranges, severity, pre-planned agendas and reactions that emerge from an event.
It is important to remember, part of the exercise of predicting and analyzing, is to better adjust your own expectations and biases about each of these variables so that each prediction after, externally models the outcomes from an otherwise unknown semi-blackbox of how a system operates.
Future predictions will now likely be more accurate on magnitude, and timeline, because of these details.
I encourage you to try this method.
If I could read, I'd call you a faggot.
If I could read, I'd call you a faggot.
Just don't call me a glowfaggot.
Everything is a prediction.
When everything is a prediction, then nothing is a prediction. Stopped clocks blah, blah, blah.
When everything is a prediction, then nothing is a prediction.
No, I mean every detail is a variable. Not "everything every written till the end of time, is some prediction."
Binary predictions alone aren't all that useful.
If we assume most significant events, even black swans, have a non-zero probability of happening at any time between now and forever, and we predict then it makes more sense to predict all of the details, the who, the what, the when, the where, and why, because the ranges, the precision, and the accuracy, while different between each of these, will reveal to us a lot more information than a one-off prediction ever could. And even when you're wrong, the difference between the correct answer, and your prediction, on a given variable, will tell you a lot more than it otherwise would.
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