The scenario46 A>>B>C5  B>>A>C5  B>>C>A44 C>>B>Asuggests that ninety percent of 
the voters would rationally prefer a Random Ballot drawing over the sure 
election of Condorcet Candidate B.As for Approval; since the B voters are so 
evenly divided in their slight preferences relative to A and C, the A and C 
supporters might reasonably consider that each has a roughly fifty-fifty chance 
of winning if they leave the decision up to B supporters. So there would be 
little if any perceived advantage for approving B on very many ballots.However, 
these probability perceptions can be easily thrown off by deceptive polls and 
other disinformation disseminated by big money campaigns.  This is a problem 
for Approval, but not for Random Ballot. In the category of deterministic 
methods, it is less of a problem for DYN (Delegable Yes/No) than for Approval, 
since DYN voters can afford to reported probabilities with a grain of 
salt.Forest
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