john9blue wrote:thegreekdog wrote:john9blue wrote:anything above a 0% success rate is a problem.
How big a problem is it? Is a 1% success rate big enough for you devote vast swathes of your life to solving? And by "solving" I don't mean convincing people who have been "turned" liberal back conservative, I mean expending energy lambasting professors and college administrations to change the culture.
if it bothered me enough, and i could actually effect meaningful change, then yes, it would be worth it, even with a 1% success rate. that's still thousands of students per year. if you could influence the political beliefs of thousands of people per year, then i'm sure you do it too.
personally i think it's more than just the professors, and i'm not really sure that the problem can be solved so easily, so i'm not especially concerned with it. there are bigger fish to fry, so to speak.
Seriously though, do you know what the success rate actually is? That would seem to be important information. For example, I know how much the federal government spends on X and I know the tax rates. I know these things so I can focus on them. I don't know what percentage of college students are swayed from one political persuasion to another based primarily or solely on formal or informal indoctrination by professors. I have anecdotal evidence that professors indirectly tried to sway opinions (in law school), but I also have anecdotal evidence that such indirect indoctrination (for lack of a better term) was unsuccessful. Before I spend time worrying about these things and trying to ascribe some large problem to them, I need more information.