Literally does. Natural counting and addition would appear as a smooth curve. Injections of votes create spikes. If these ballots were naturally counted, it would have created a sharper rising curve instead of a direct leap in the data.
Benford's law is about single digits in a number, meaning 170000 is the same as 17000 for the purposes of creating a Benford distribution out of the first two digits.
You have zero idea what you're talking about. Goodbye.
It breaks benfords law for one. Maybe you should have, I don't know, paid attention?
Benford's law has nothing to do with vote spikes.
Literally does. Natural counting and addition would appear as a smooth curve. Injections of votes create spikes. If these ballots were naturally counted, it would have created a sharper rising curve instead of a direct leap in the data.
Benford's law is about single digits in a number, meaning 170000 is the same as 17000 for the purposes of creating a Benford distribution out of the first two digits.
You have zero idea what you're talking about. Goodbye.
Yes, now look at how that is visualized from data into graphical form. May want to, I don't know, actually look at that.