Just as a point of writing commentary on anything, unless you've got a nice bunch of supporting evidence, it's almost always a bad idea to use 'It's safe to say', 'it certainly is true', 'this is why', etc.
Very few of us here are professional political scientists. We're armchair generals at best, and we should treat each other as such. Sources are paramount, and speculation is speculation- nothing more or less. When we act like we're right because of 'common sense' or the arguments we perceive to exist, we're only doing a disservice to healthy conversation and speculation about the world.
Not serious example, "It's safe to say that, of all Bay12 members, Helgoland is most likely to have a communist Penis."
There's no empirical grounds to go either way on that one, and really nowhere to go if I say 'prove me wrong'. We can debate the nature of penises and communism all day and still be no closer to deciding if 'The Red Threat' is an apt nickname for Helgoland's genitalia.
"I think that, of all Bay12 members, Helgoland is most likely to have a communist Penis."
This makes it clear that this is my personal thought on the matter, and can easily be engaged with the question 'Why do you think that', which is excellent grounds to start a conversion.
Serious Example, from my actual thoughts.
I think that, in order to vote, you should have to pass a competence exam on the absolute facts of the most relevant issues facing the nation. I know, there's a shitload of horribad kinks that come with that, notably having the effect of potentially rigged exams that would disproportionately hedge out the lesser educated, but goddamn do I get tired of people throwing around real weight with only emotional reasoning and no understanding of what their power means.