Difference between revisions of "868: Nolan Chart"
m (Replace dead link with archive.org link) |
|||
(13 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown) | |||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | The [http://www.nolanchart.com Nolan Chart] is a visual representation of the political spectrum that measures not only liberal vs conservative tendencies but also libertarian and statist tendencies. In this comic, it is taken to a different end. One one side are both Democrats and Republicans and on the other side | + | The [http://www.nolanchart.com Nolan Chart] is a visual representation of the political spectrum that measures not only liberal vs conservative tendencies but also libertarian and statist tendencies. In this comic, it is taken to a different end. One one side are both Democrats and Republicans and on the other side are baseball fans. In the typical Nolan Chart, Libertarians are in the top quadrant, but in this one "Internet Libertarians" take the spot because they love the Nolan Charts (which are found online) and have a lot of political opinions. |
− | In the | + | Nolan may also refer to baseball hall of famer [http://baseballhall.org/hof/ryan-nolan Nolan Ryan]. |
+ | |||
+ | In the title text, the NFPA-compliant chemical manufacturers are mentioned because of [https://web.archive.org/web/20150326215201/https://ehs.okstate.edu/modules/hazcom/nfpadia2.gif this diagram]. Sir Charles Wheatstone was the inventor of the Wheatstone bridge, which is also {{w|File:Wheatstonebridge.svg|diamond-shaped}}. The image text makes reference to Nate Silver, who previously worked for Baseball Prospectus and now writes a data-driven political and sports blog called Five Thirty Eight for ESPN. He is both a lover of diamond-shaped diagrams and has political opinions. Politically-active kite designers both would have strong political opinions (it comes with the territory of being politically active) and would love diamond-shaped diagrams, presumably because they would be interested in blueprints of kites. | ||
==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
− | :[Diamond-shaped four-panel diagram.] | + | :[Diamond-shaped four-panel diagram with each panel labeled. Two arrows indicate axis up along the left and right lower side of the diamond:] |
− | :[Top panel | + | :[Left]: Political opinions |
− | :[Left panel | + | :[Right]: Love of diamond-shaped diagrams |
− | :[ | + | :[Top panel]: Internet libertarians |
− | : | + | :[Left panel]: Democrats, Republicans |
− | :[ | + | :[Right panel]: Baseball fans |
− | : | + | :[Bottom panel]: Other |
{{comic discussion}} | {{comic discussion}} | ||
+ | |||
[[Category:Charts]] | [[Category:Charts]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Comics featuring Nate Silver]] | ||
[[Category:Politics]] | [[Category:Politics]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Baseball]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Internet]] |
Revision as of 01:15, 17 November 2017
Explanation
The Nolan Chart is a visual representation of the political spectrum that measures not only liberal vs conservative tendencies but also libertarian and statist tendencies. In this comic, it is taken to a different end. One one side are both Democrats and Republicans and on the other side are baseball fans. In the typical Nolan Chart, Libertarians are in the top quadrant, but in this one "Internet Libertarians" take the spot because they love the Nolan Charts (which are found online) and have a lot of political opinions.
Nolan may also refer to baseball hall of famer Nolan Ryan.
In the title text, the NFPA-compliant chemical manufacturers are mentioned because of this diagram. Sir Charles Wheatstone was the inventor of the Wheatstone bridge, which is also diamond-shaped. The image text makes reference to Nate Silver, who previously worked for Baseball Prospectus and now writes a data-driven political and sports blog called Five Thirty Eight for ESPN. He is both a lover of diamond-shaped diagrams and has political opinions. Politically-active kite designers both would have strong political opinions (it comes with the territory of being politically active) and would love diamond-shaped diagrams, presumably because they would be interested in blueprints of kites.
Transcript
- [Diamond-shaped four-panel diagram with each panel labeled. Two arrows indicate axis up along the left and right lower side of the diamond:]
- [Left]: Political opinions
- [Right]: Love of diamond-shaped diagrams
- [Top panel]: Internet libertarians
- [Left panel]: Democrats, Republicans
- [Right panel]: Baseball fans
- [Bottom panel]: Other
Discussion
I'm a Republican baseball fan, where does that put me? ~JFreund
- The Midwest? Curtmack (talk) 21:12, 11 February 2014 (UTC)
- That was glorious wordplay right there. The Goyim (talk) 13:46, 12 March 2015 (UTC)
What about the people who have no idea why a Nolan Chart is any different from a Punnet Square rotated 45°? --Tiny Desk Engineer (talk) "My user page can't be vandalized if it never existed" 22:43, 24 January 2023 (UTC)