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Of course not
Let's focus on this because I think it's pretty clear, while you seem to be accusing me of using it to get a cheap win. As I pointed out, we have different purposes here. I see the bet thread as being about finding out who is right in arguments and about asking people to stand behind their words (with the hopes that they will make more of an effort to get things right). I think you're just trying to win, and that you're thinking that I'm playing the same way.
So, if you were to say, "if Trump has a heart attack or a stroke or something, a lot of Americans who don't normally support him will rally around him, and he'll see a bump in his approval," I'd agree with that. Thus, the bet would be settled not a point of legitimate disagreement between us, but rather on a failure of the terms of the bet to properly capture our point of disagreement. Likewise, NK bombing Guam or something could very well cause a bump in Trump's approval. Remember that W, who was arguably an even worse president than Trump, was around 90% after 9/11. If you're asking me if I'd bet against that kind of reaction, the answer is obviously no.
But what I don't see happening is Trump's approval rating rising over 50% as a result of changing perception of his own actions and conduct. I actually think it's being propped up by a strong economy that I think even you'd admit he's had nothing to do with. A downturn there would cause a lot of the people who don't really follow politics but assume the president is doing well as long as the economy is to abandon him, and I think he could fall into the low 30s with even a small recession. I'm gathering that you think it will rise not because of a freak incident that is out of his control and unpredictable but for some reason related to his activity (anti-immigrant rhetoric or superficial alterations to trade deals, for example). So there's a point of disagreement between us that can be at least partly resolved with a bet.