Of course you do. Then spend less time arguing with people online and voting in online polls, and spend more time doing these eminently practical things.
It shouldn’t even be a contest, of course — a man who (unlike the others) predicted the housing collapse at the start of the bubble in 2001, a truth-teller who (unlike the others) is willing to be booed on live TV rather than back down from his positions, and a man of courage who (unlike the others) tells you specifically what he’ll cut, should be at 95 percent in the polls.
Remember, incidentally, that our candidate enjoys an advantage at caucuses, where the intensity of a candidate’s support really counts (it’s the real diehards who go the trouble of participating in a caucus). Same was true of the Ames Straw Poll. Polls of “likely straw poll goers” had Ron at 16%, but at the straw poll itself, among the people who actually showed up as opposed to merely telling the pollsters they would show up, Ron won nearly 28% of the vote.