no, just saying it's the kind of thing Turkheimer says in the ice cream and spinach paper for example
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Replying to @SilverVVulpes
I remember the paper, but what do you mean specifically?
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Replying to @RCAFDM
nothing, just what he said about same stimuli->different reactions->some parenting effects are non-shared, unsure if you expect more
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Replying to @SilverVVulpes
Presumably, we're talking about an average treatment effect here though, right? As in, if real, it should in principle be somewhat generalizable to poor in the Philippines (and maybe other similarly situated groups in other countries)
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Replying to @RCAFDM @SilverVVulpes
Funnily in the US this standard finding is that catholics make more money, not protestants.
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Replying to @ArtirKel @SilverVVulpes
I’ve heard that. Makes sense overall, tho it’s definitely heterogeneous. Don’t think that applies amongst mainline denominations overall, and certainly not for Episcopalian/Anglican.
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(Not that I think faith has much, if anything, to do with it , but I’d like to see this split out for NHW)
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Replying to @RCAFDM @SilverVVulpes
Indeed, there is some race confounding going on
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Replying to @ArtirKel @SilverVVulpes
Yes, quite significantly. I’d love to get my hands on the more granular polling data
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Too bad they don't have IQ, though as I recall, these findings parallel those for IQ of these belief groups.
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Yeah, I suspect there'd be a pretty decent correlation at this level of analysis.
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