Yes.
does not indicate that more of my respondents hold those values. It just indicates that the ones who do mentioned more differences.
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There's a whole cluster of values around individuality, meritocracy, moderation that women say they can't express safely.
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On a pie chart, these overwhelm the other big issue -gender scepticism - but it doesn't indicate that many more *respondents* hold former
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Its that the radfems just have the one issue whilst the others are all being made by the same people who form a group not much bigger.
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So, I think I just need to be very clear that 'points of contention' not *people* are represented by the figures & the ppl can hold a mix.
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Maybe also have a pie chart for the rad fems and another for the liberal/sceptical group.
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I did consider this but the problem is that the 'broadly liberal' group don't tend to identify their political positions.
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Someone saying they favour equal opportunities could be left-liberal, centrist, conservative. It'd get even more subjective.
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I could look at their views & say 'left-leaning liberal' but they could consider themselves a right-wing libertarian.
End of conversation
New conversation -
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I need to work on this. Obviously.