I asked this question the other day (on a comments section of an article), because I was genuinely curious, and got lambasted for it as "slamming college graduates".
It's not meant as a slam, at all, to college graduates, but merely a question of curiosity.
The question is fairly straightforward: Do college graduates (or "college educated" people), on the whole, make better voting decisions because they are college graduates (or "college educated")? And if so, why? And how do we know it's a "better voting decision"?
Keeping in mind that there are any number of degrees and majors one could earn in college. And some are, honestly, more difficult to acquire than others.
Is it something in the classes themselves? College culture? Do certain majors vote certain ways?
I mean, someone with a Journalism degree has to take several different classes than someone with, say, a Computer Science degree. That's no real indication of how they'll vote, one way or the other.
I'm not going into (or asking, for that matter) if they're smarter, or whatever. My focus is simply on their voting decisions.
And if it's the case that college educated individuals do (on the whole) make better voting decisions, why don't all college educated individuals vote the same way?
Because I've noticed that during the primaries they would always ask about "college educated" people and how they vote.
So I'm merely asking out of curiosity. Nothing more.
It's not meant as a slam, at all, to college graduates, but merely a question of curiosity.
The question is fairly straightforward: Do college graduates (or "college educated" people), on the whole, make better voting decisions because they are college graduates (or "college educated")? And if so, why? And how do we know it's a "better voting decision"?
Keeping in mind that there are any number of degrees and majors one could earn in college. And some are, honestly, more difficult to acquire than others.
Is it something in the classes themselves? College culture? Do certain majors vote certain ways?
I mean, someone with a Journalism degree has to take several different classes than someone with, say, a Computer Science degree. That's no real indication of how they'll vote, one way or the other.
I'm not going into (or asking, for that matter) if they're smarter, or whatever. My focus is simply on their voting decisions.
And if it's the case that college educated individuals do (on the whole) make better voting decisions, why don't all college educated individuals vote the same way?
Because I've noticed that during the primaries they would always ask about "college educated" people and how they vote.
So I'm merely asking out of curiosity. Nothing more.
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