When the government makes up a bogus trend which inverts reality, that is now called a “data entry error”
The U.S. military proudly touted a 7 percent drop in Taliban violence in 2012 as a measure of progress in America’s longest war. Only one problem: The drop never happened.
Its explanation: a data-entry error.
The Associated Press’ Robert Burns discovered the mistake, which undercut a January claim by the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), the NATO military command in Afghanistan. In reality, Burns reports, there was no substantive change in the level of “enemy-initiated attacks” in Afghanistan during 2012.
‘Data-Entry Error’ Led Military to Falsely Claim Taliban Attacks Are Down | Danger Room | Wired.com
We used to call that “getting caught lying.”
Climatologists call it a scenario, and tell you that you have your facts wrong.
in the IT world we call it a ‘design feature’
For all the money and lives spent, 7% is not very impressive, even if it were true, which it is not.
Kind of like a .08 degree temp rise in 100 years, that may or may not be true.