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jrdjared OP t1_jdskq4h wrote

“Does correcting misperceptions of group size change peoples’ attitudes on related issues? Current research suggests it does not. In a series of studies (one of which used a survey fielded by YouGov), political scientists John Sides and Jack Citrin attempted to correct inaccurate beliefs about the size of the U.S. foreign-born population, both subtly, by embedding the accurate information in a news story, and explicitly, by providing survey respondents with Census Bureau estimates. They found that while providing this information did somewhat improve people’s knowledge of the number of immigrants in America, they did not make people more supportive of immigration.”

Post facts society

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merlin401 t1_jdsln1f wrote

Right because this shows people don’t understand percentages not that they don’t understand minority representation. When a lot of people say 20% of the US is trans they are just trying to express that it’s a minority not really that it is exactly 1 in every 5

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CaptainObvious t1_jdsr4b1 wrote

Who the hell thinks 90 million people live in Texas?

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googajub t1_jdsr4ra wrote

Percentage of Americans who live in Texas: estimate: 30%

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breathnac t1_jdstyrs wrote

People are really bad at understanding proportions smaller than 20% it seems

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Jaelg-0 t1_jdsvn84 wrote

I really don’t buy these numbers 21% of people are trans or 20% of American households make a million a year? How many transexual millionaires do you guys know? 30% of Americans live in New York City alone? What? And who thinks 27% of Americans are Native Americans? I have a neighbor who’s Native American and he’s the only Native American I’ve ever seen outside of the internet or tv and he’ll tell you the same thing other than his family obviously

I know Americans are stupid but come on these can’t be right

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Ian_Rubbish t1_jdtav0w wrote

21 percent are transgender? I can guess where they get their news from

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thedybbuk t1_jdtej9i wrote

What makes you think this? There's another explanation here that some people believe being trans is "fashionable" and kinda are being "groomed." If you turn on Fox News you will see they truly think this is an epidemic. Why do you think that is less likely than your explanation that people are just really stupid and don't understand percentages, but really actually understand the true percentage of trans people in society?

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Plum12345 t1_jdtek6a wrote

I agree with you. Some of these numbers are way off. The trans and gay percentages are way off. And the estimated ethnic minority percentages alone add up to way over 100%.

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invertedshamrock t1_jdtfzt9 wrote

It absolutely does not. Straight people are everywhere in every single piece of media including those that would be labeled as LGBT media. In most such LGBT media queer people are still numerical minorities in the stories that are principally about them. Queer representation in media is still vanishing slim compared to the actual proportions of our society

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merlin401 t1_jdtge2s wrote

If it were JUST trans people then your argument would maybe make sense. But people are doing the same thing about EVERY minority group no matter how “objectionable” or “unobjectionable” that media tries to paint them. My explanation means people are way less stupid than your explanation would. Like you really feel Americans BELIEVE that about 1:3 people live in Texas and 1:3 live in Texas and 1:3 live in California and no one lives anywhere else? No, they just don’t conceptually understand percentages. Simple

0

roofilopolis t1_jdtgekz wrote

People need to start looking into how yougov runs surveys. Literally pay >$1/hr for people to take surveys. The faster you take them the more you earn.

They’re completed by people in third world countries claiming to be from somewhere else clicking buttons as quickly as possible.

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thedybbuk t1_jdthw1g wrote

This isn't valid logic. You're basically saying because they made one mistake about one group, every mistake about every other group is based on the exact same mistaken idea and there can be no other answer for any other situation.

This logic especially falls apart in the current political climate. There is no political party making it their platform that there is an epidemic of people identifying as Texan. There are, however, multiple political parties around the world, including in the US, saying that there is an epidemic of trans people grooming children and making them trans, and of trans identity being fashionable.

In other words, your logic is because these people don't understand percentages they can never think any minority groups are actually bigger than they are. You really can't see why that falls apart?

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thedybbuk t1_jdtj7bj wrote

And I'm a lawyer, if we are pulling out qualifications just to support our arguments. Your underlying logic is a mess. I will explain again:

You are taking one statement ("People don't understand percentages") and are trying to apply it across the board to every mistaken belief about minority group sizes. Despite the fact all minority groups are not the same and are not treated the same by society.

To do this you are purposely shutting your eyes to any other explanation that may apply only to some groups and not universally. Like the fact GOP leaders like DeSantis are making it their entire platform that gender dysphoria is somehow spreading like a virus through grooming.

Honestly, what am I saying that you're objecting to? Do you disagree that conservatives have made it a major political point that trans people are recruiting children? Or are you arguing that there's just no way this mistaken belief could be showing up in the data?

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merlin401 t1_jdtkt3o wrote

Yes that is precisely what science would consider a better explanation: to find a simple single solution that explains all the consistently odd results. Not to say “wow the same thing happens for all these different instances … Let’s assume one solution that fits our political agenda for one of them and then look for a completely different explanation for each of the other cases.”

0

Avicennaete t1_jdtlllq wrote

Yeah the trans community are way under-represented but that doesn't hold true for gays for eg.

Almost 1 in 4-5 characters in TV shows I watched in the past few years have been gay. In some shows like Sex Education, half of the characters are queer.

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NAU80 t1_jdtlrz7 wrote

Interesting to see that 47% are Republicans while 42% are Democrats. The survey has them split almost 50/50. I’ve heard that Democrats are in the majority but they are concentrated in fewer states. This is what is given as the reason Republicans can control governments.

How can that be????

2

cosmernaut420 t1_jdtm531 wrote

>queer representation in Hollywood is exactly the same as Fox News telling you the drag queens and trans folk are going to mind control and molest your children

You enlightened centrists never cease to amaze me.

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cosmernaut420 t1_jdtmar0 wrote

It's as much an indictment of American education as any other thing.

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thedybbuk t1_jdto61k wrote

So in other words, you want one simple solution that applies to all situations. And you think somehow this makes you scientific instead of dogmatic?

Nowhere have you even argued against anything I said. You are just insisting one simple solution that applies universally is best.

You are the worst type of statistician. One who wants to ignore human messiness and politics because they complicate things too much. You're basically trying to turn sociology into a study of universal constants, with all the parts that make humans an especially difficult topic to study removed.

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mochafiend t1_jdtpwa4 wrote

I agree that LGBTQ+ and even racial minorities are perceptually over represented in media. I think folks in less urban areas see the media that takes place in more densely populated places and so they feel it’s all in their face. I don’t have data to prove out whether this is actually real, but I believe the perception is absolutely true and I do this media shaped that in a significant way. I’ve been downvoted for saying this before but I don’t think it’s controversial.

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Avicennaete t1_jdtqhvb wrote

I said they're both the reason why Americans think queer population is larger than it actually is. Didn't say anything about whether good or bad they are.

I know being an extremist (far left or right) helps people feel a sense of community and belonging but I don't think it's worth of a trade off it to shut off your brain and live in an eco chamber all your life attacking whoever doesn't fully agree with you.

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cosmernaut420 t1_jdtrckg wrote

>I said they're both the reason why Americans think queer population is larger than it actually is. Didn't say anything about whether good or bad they are.

I think that was my whole point. Implying these behaviors are "the same" is shortsighted bordering on deceptive. Obviously in a vacuum, if every ensemble television or movie cast tics every representational diversity box, you're not going to have anything resembling a literal representational cross-section of broader society. I doubt seriously it causes as much overestimation as a 24 hour news cycle that hypes the same aspects of representational diversity as inimical to and actively conquering broader society.

All that aside the fact that one of these groups is regularly doing stochastic terrorism on live television, and it's not actually the kids from Euphoria.

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Gabagool1987 t1_jdtu7dq wrote

Media is a big reason for this. You'd think watching US TV that black people are like 70-80% of the population instead of 12%

0

merlin401 t1_jdtuf2o wrote

One one simple explanation adequately explains all the results, yes that is best. If the data showed something else and some pieces didn’t fit then yes, other solutions should be sought. Very frequently the most boring answer is the right one, as much as you want to make it be some complicated political thing.

(And for what it’s worth I’m politically on “your side”. The right wing media is poisoning the well regarding trans people and, hey, maybe without that this poll shows 16% estimated instesd of 20% or something. The point is you don’t need that explanation to explain it because every other data point is showing the same misunderstandin)

0

cosmernaut420 t1_jdtws6c wrote

The reasons for that phenomenon are not nearly uniform, just like literally anything to do with human nature. You can't use Occam's Razor against human logic, it will never work.

An actual statistician would be painfully aware of this, and not gainsaying people presenting perfectly reasonable explanations that aren't just "everyone is bad at estimates for exactly the same reason".

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merlin401 t1_jdty90h wrote

Not “everyone” obviously. But overall we see bad estimates from humans on average in every category here when pooled together. So yes that is exactly the reason for this. Your “logic” is not only bad it is totally backwards. But I don’t care to speak with you anymore.

1

xmorecowbellx t1_jdtylbg wrote

There are only 26 million Sikhs in the world and 24 million live in India. Yet seems like they are everywhere here in Canada. Perceptions can be very odd.

1

HardToPeeMidasTouch t1_jdu3i06 wrote

I would toss this up to Hollywood and having quotas or inclusion numbers that don't represent the true numbers percentage wise of the population.

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ChipHGGS t1_jduapzu wrote

No way people estimated 1 in 5 are transgender. I imagine it being higher than actual, but this seems like bullshit

2

rttr123 t1_jduetlk wrote

How people identify politically:

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- On average, Americans' political party preferences in 2021 looked similar to prior years, with slightly more U.S. adults identifying as Democrats or leaning Democratic (46%) than identified as Republicans or leaned Republican (43%).

-gallup polls

https://news.gallup.com/poll/388781/political-party-preferences-shifted-greatly-during-2021.aspx

------*

Party registration

As of October 2022, 48 million registered voters in these areas identified themselves as Democrats. At 38.78%, Democrats represented the single largest share of registered voters in the states and territories that allow voters to indicate partisan affiliation on their registration forms.

A total of 36.4 million registered voters identified themselves as Republicans, representing 29.42% of registered voters in these areas.

A total of 35.3 million registered voters identified themselves as independents or unaffiliated with any political party. This amounted to 28.55% of registered voters in these areas.

-ballotopedia

https://ballotpedia.org/Partisan_affiliations_of_registered_voters

-------*

49m democrats & 38.8m republicans (registered)

https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/registered-voters-by-party

1

Hendursag t1_jdugzb9 wrote

So wait, people thought:

62% of Americans had a household income over $50K,

34% had a household income over $100K,

26% had a household income over $500K, and

20% had a household income over $1M?

That’s kind of crazy.

2

PavelPod t1_jdunpdo wrote

All who live outside US believe:

  • 95% of US population own multiple guns
  • 95% of US population live in a mix of Texas, Alabama and Florida
  • Americans eat only cheap and ugly burgers and drink cola
  • newborns get a car (and a gun) right in a hospital
  • no one has medical insurance and people go bankrupt right after first visit to hospital
  • everyone has a lawyer
  • doctors and dentists fly their own jets and own mansions
  • IT folks (developers, engineers) work from beaches 2 hours a day and have 7 digit salary
  • there is no vacation
  • everybody work 80 hours week
  • police randomly shoot people. Each cop needs to shoot at least 5 citizens every day

,and so on and so forth… I’ve heard so much nonsense from folks abroad about US…

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Electronic_Grade508 t1_jdup7dy wrote

Did you hear about the Jewish lesbian in a union that makes $500k, who’s also gay and a Catholic Hispanic transgender left handed Texan.

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Ortus14 t1_jdvdjqt wrote

Unpopular opinion.

At least in significant number of those the cases, the statistics are wrong, not most people.

From outdated statistics about trans people, to selection bias from surveys used to form other statistics.

Ontop of all that, this is a survey of the type of people who respond to "YouGov" polls, which will include trolls.

In addition if the pollsters were paid, it makes sense that most of them would spam 30% or a similiar number through most of the questions so they can get their money and move on. I've done these things with paid polls, and you get like three cents a survey so you don't want to waste a ton of time on it reading and thinking about all the questions.

You want to scan for gotcha questions like "Are you reading all the questions?" incase the survey creator was smart enough to include those, and spam quick answers for all the other questions.

−1

Phadafi t1_jdvdzpu wrote

Even Americans think the US is only Texas (22%), California (25%) and NY (22%).

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Enpikiku t1_jdveuqh wrote

83% have a driver's license while 88% own cars?

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WebIcy6156 t1_jdvl02v wrote

I don’t see why people think there are so many Muslims. I used to live in CA and I just met a few of them.

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MrMitchWeaver t1_jdvt0rk wrote

The math of the average response is just insane

gays and lesbians (estimate: 30%, true: 3%),
bisexuals (estimate: 29%, true: 4%), and
Transgender (estimate: 21%, true: 0.6%). 

Leaving 20% for cishetero and everyone else.

Native Americans (estimate: 27%, true: 1%),
Asian Americans (estimate: 29%, true: 6%), and
Black Americans (estimate: 41%, true: 12%).

Leaving 3% for whites and everyone else.

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Gulbahar-00 t1_je8ncze wrote

I have a background in suicidology and talked about something like that briefly. The concept of “suicide awareness” is a bit misguided as people are not aware of issues within their community, not on a national level.

In a survey, people estimated that 20 percent of the population has attempted suicide. It’s actually five percent. But 40 percent said that they personally know someone who has.

Three percent of the population has green eyes. I seriously doubt that 60 percent of people will say that they don’t know anyone with green eyes.

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