Left-libertarian identification doesn’t seem to correlate much with ANY numeric measure; “economic” positioning ranged from 1 to 98, social positioning from 10 to 99.99, and violence positioning from 2 to 99; though 25 of the 37 were left of center on the social axis (though plenty in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s)
Only two people who identified as US-liberal listed either measure as below 50, but there too there was a wide range, with plenty of people everywhere from the 50s to the 90s.
This leaves me with a few questions:
How much of this variance is explained by people having different ideas about the general population, versus different political opinions?
Are there particular issues on which these self-identified groups agree, even if they have different general ideas?
I made a picture of the numeric results, but it’s hideous, needs a key, and I don’t have a nice way of uploading it anyway.
Addendum:
Left-libertarian identification doesn’t seem to correlate much with ANY numeric measure; “economic” positioning ranged from 1 to 98, social positioning from 10 to 99.99, and violence positioning from 2 to 99; though 25 of the 37 were left of center on the social axis (though plenty in the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s)
Only two people who identified as US-liberal listed either measure as below 50, but there too there was a wide range, with plenty of people everywhere from the 50s to the 90s.
This leaves me with a few questions: How much of this variance is explained by people having different ideas about the general population, versus different political opinions? Are there particular issues on which these self-identified groups agree, even if they have different general ideas?
I made a picture of the numeric results, but it’s hideous, needs a key, and I don’t have a nice way of uploading it anyway.