BY
A friend from within the Brussels bubble sent this blog a link regarding a recent SOCIS opinion survey made in Odessa.
What caught the eye in Brussels was “In addition, according to the majority of Odessa residents, the situation is tense in the city – 54.5%. Some 30.1% of respondents said the situation was more or less stable, 9.9% called the situation explosive and 5.5% of residents were undecided.”
Eyebrows therefore raised within the EU institutions regarding the stability – or not – of Odessa based upon this quote. After all, which policymaker these days has time to do anything more than scan a few bullet points, or at most a paragraph or two, of any document pushed under their nose?
Questions of methodology aside, just as important if not more so, is how exactly were the questions worded to solicit the answers given – those questions simply falling outside the time available for those struggling to find time to scan and absorb bullet points.
The exact wording of questions frames outcomes as the below satire makes clear.
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