Blake said that if voters whose real preference ordering is 1. A 2. B & C insincerely ranked B over C, though indifferent between the two, that would be what I call "drastic strategy". For 1 thing, I've only used the term for defensive strategy, and what Blake describes isn't defensive strategy. For another thing, Blake's example isn't about rankig a less liked alternative equal to or over a more liked one, and is nothing like what I'd call drastic strategy. I probaly never or rarely say "drastic strategy"; I say "drastic defensive strategy". *** Mike
