Will a major presidential candidate call something "based" by 2048?
40
αΉ€1693
2049
68%
chance

If a candidate who polls at over 20% in a Democratic or Republican primary or in a general election according to polling aggregators RealClearPolitics and Fivethirtyeight (or suitable alternative if both are defunct) uses the adjective "based" to describe something or someone, including themselves, in official communications, resolve to YES. Otherwise, resolve to NO.

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By the time a politician is in a position to do so publicly, based will be even more cringe than it currently is

I assume this has to be the new contemporary meaning of "based" - not, like, based on something?

@Conflux Yes, based as in an adjective.

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