Indeed, 

> "SFC: If no one falsifies a preference, and there's a CW, and a 
> majority of all the voters
> prefer the CW to candidate Y, and vote sincerely, then Y shouldn't win."


here is a stronger property:

SFC2: if there's a CW, and no one falsifies, then the CW wins.

And this property is obeyed exactly by Condorcet methods.

Warren D Smith
http://rangevoting.org
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