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There's a margin of error, that could go either way in any way in any particular election. But that doesn't rationally justify just rejecting information that you don't like, which is what we're seeing on the right.
The poll numbers were way outside of the margin of error. Races that had Biden up by 7 or 8 points in the polls are within a percentage point.
The funny thing is that last time around the polls weren't nearly as off as people think they were. Most poll averages were within the margin of error. It just happened that Trump ran the table and won a few states by a fraction of a percentage point and picked up the electoral collage.
This time around it's the flip. It looks like Biden is going to win, and that's going to make it look like the pollsters are vindicated. But the reality is that many of them were way off the mark. It just happened that Biden is squeaking out what he needs by extremely small margins.
When it comes to "just rejecting information that you don't like" I'd look no further than the twitter storm attacking Real Clear Politics for their final aggregate numbers because they had the audacity to give weight to polls that leaned toward Trump, unlike Nate Silver who has a formula that gives very little weight to these Republican leaning polls. Except the Real Clear Politics average did much, much better than Silver's average (and even the Real Clear Politics Averages had a Biden lean).