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Posts by Tina Fetner

just write it terrible for five minutes and see where it goes. or write questions to yourself into the draft—“what the fuck goes here, i don’t know, but it’s something about blah blah this will sound smarter later” is acceptable rough draft material

1 day ago 787 112 3 11

Worst US export.

3 days ago 9 1 0 0
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Among U.S. adults, over 2.1 million people -- 0.8% of the population -- identify as transgender. Minnesota has the highest percentage of transgender residents at 1.2%.

Read the full report at bit.ly/TranspeopleUS

4 days ago 31 12 0 1
In that sense, the logic of viewpoint diversity contains its own extinction, if truth really is the goal. Consider that a researcher in 1952, trying to figure out how DNA is structured, would need to survey all the theories and viewpoints on DNA structure up to that point before making an evidence-based opinion. DNA’s structure was still (just barely) a live question. But by 1954, our researcher wouldn’t need to study the theories of the triple-helix model, or the side-by-side model, at all, because by 1953 the double-helix model had been convincingly established. Our researcher could safely reject the triple-helix or side-by-side models—or simply ignore them, not even stopping to sniff at those particular diverse garden flowers—because the local question about DNA’s basic structure had been answered. Academics do this all the time because we are pursuing local truths. If we are even half-decent teachers, we are instructing our students how to do it too. On any particular topic, viewpoint diversity might be useful to initially survey competing theories, and once a consensus of the truth of that matter has been established, viewpoint diversity on that topic is rightly, habitually, dismissed.

In that sense, the logic of viewpoint diversity contains its own extinction, if truth really is the goal. Consider that a researcher in 1952, trying to figure out how DNA is structured, would need to survey all the theories and viewpoints on DNA structure up to that point before making an evidence-based opinion. DNA’s structure was still (just barely) a live question. But by 1954, our researcher wouldn’t need to study the theories of the triple-helix model, or the side-by-side model, at all, because by 1953 the double-helix model had been convincingly established. Our researcher could safely reject the triple-helix or side-by-side models—or simply ignore them, not even stopping to sniff at those particular diverse garden flowers—because the local question about DNA’s basic structure had been answered. Academics do this all the time because we are pursuing local truths. If we are even half-decent teachers, we are instructing our students how to do it too. On any particular topic, viewpoint diversity might be useful to initially survey competing theories, and once a consensus of the truth of that matter has been established, viewpoint diversity on that topic is rightly, habitually, dismissed.

Really excellent logical discussion about the practical problem with 'viewpoint diversity' as a governing logic for universities-- if truth is the goal of scientific research. www.aaup.org/academe/issu...

5 days ago 42 17 0 2

Good one, Dad!

5 days ago 1 0 0 0

It’s hard not to see Vance’s criticism of the Pope’s theological bona fides as just silly hubris.

But I also see it as a stress test of sorts — can they manipulate sentiment against a pontiff. Not for Trump’s interests. More likely for Thiel’s.

6 days ago 1024 224 14 22
Change 1: Making it easier to choose “no religion”
As the share of religious “nones” grows, censuses that measure religion are increasingly making “no religion” the first response category in religious identity questions rather than the last. Some respondents may choose this option simply because it appears first, a primacy effect.

In 2011, “no religion” was the last religion response category in Australia. In 2016, Australia made “no religion” the first option and the religiously unaffiliated share rose 9 percentage points from 24% to 33%. Reporting on Australia’s census results, CNN noted that the “nones” outnumbered Catholics for the first time. However, the report didn’t mention that there was a change in response categories that may have contributed to this shift (Berlinger 2017). During this period, the rise of religious “nones” was lower—about three points—on International Social Survey Programme surveys that kept their measure constant.

Other questionnaire design decisions also have made it easiest to choose “no religion.” In 1991, Canada’s census introduced a write-in box for respondents to spell out their religious identity. However, identifying with “no religion” only required filling in a bubble. New Zealand and Poland introduced a similar change in recent censuses. The relative ease of choosing “no religion” may contribute, at least in part, to the rise of the “nones” in these countries.

Change 1: Making it easier to choose “no religion” As the share of religious “nones” grows, censuses that measure religion are increasingly making “no religion” the first response category in religious identity questions rather than the last. Some respondents may choose this option simply because it appears first, a primacy effect. In 2011, “no religion” was the last religion response category in Australia. In 2016, Australia made “no religion” the first option and the religiously unaffiliated share rose 9 percentage points from 24% to 33%. Reporting on Australia’s census results, CNN noted that the “nones” outnumbered Catholics for the first time. However, the report didn’t mention that there was a change in response categories that may have contributed to this shift (Berlinger 2017). During this period, the rise of religious “nones” was lower—about three points—on International Social Survey Programme surveys that kept their measure constant. Other questionnaire design decisions also have made it easiest to choose “no religion.” In 1991, Canada’s census introduced a write-in box for respondents to spell out their religious identity. However, identifying with “no religion” only required filling in a bubble. New Zealand and Poland introduced a similar change in recent censuses. The relative ease of choosing “no religion” may contribute, at least in part, to the rise of the “nones” in these countries.

Change 2: Shifting between one-step and two-step measures of religious identity
One-step measures of religious identity ask a question like, “What is your religion, if any?” and typically offer “no religion” as a response category. By contrast, a two-step question first asks a filter question like “Do you have a religion?” and if respondents say they do, they are invited to specify it. Outside Muslim-majority countries, these two types of questions tend to produce different results (Brenner et al. 2024; Hackett 2014; Voas and Bruce 2004; Voas 2015).

The share of religious “nones” is higher in surveys that use a two-step measure. People with low levels of religious commitment who might volunteer a religious identity in a one-step question tend to fall into the “no religion” bucket in a two-step question.

Slovakia changed from a one-step to a two-step question between 2011 and 2021. In 2021, the unaffiliated share of the population was 25%, up from 15% in the 2011 census. It is possible, however, that much of the apparent change between census waves in Slovakia may have been a measurement artifact. Interestingly, the European Social Survey in 2012 used a two-step question and found an identical unaffiliated share, 25%, as the 2021 Slovakia census, which used a two-step question.

The opposite change could create an illusion of decline in the share of religious nones. For example, as Lithuania switched from a two-step question in 2001 to a one-step question in 2011, the unaffiliated share of the population dropped from 10% to 7%.

These types of changes are not limited to censuses. We observed that the unaffiliated share in Sweden dropped about 10 points between the 2010 ISSP, which used a two-step measure, and the 2011 wave, which used a one-step measure.

Change 2: Shifting between one-step and two-step measures of religious identity One-step measures of religious identity ask a question like, “What is your religion, if any?” and typically offer “no religion” as a response category. By contrast, a two-step question first asks a filter question like “Do you have a religion?” and if respondents say they do, they are invited to specify it. Outside Muslim-majority countries, these two types of questions tend to produce different results (Brenner et al. 2024; Hackett 2014; Voas and Bruce 2004; Voas 2015). The share of religious “nones” is higher in surveys that use a two-step measure. People with low levels of religious commitment who might volunteer a religious identity in a one-step question tend to fall into the “no religion” bucket in a two-step question. Slovakia changed from a one-step to a two-step question between 2011 and 2021. In 2021, the unaffiliated share of the population was 25%, up from 15% in the 2011 census. It is possible, however, that much of the apparent change between census waves in Slovakia may have been a measurement artifact. Interestingly, the European Social Survey in 2012 used a two-step question and found an identical unaffiliated share, 25%, as the 2021 Slovakia census, which used a two-step question. The opposite change could create an illusion of decline in the share of religious nones. For example, as Lithuania switched from a two-step question in 2001 to a one-step question in 2011, the unaffiliated share of the population dropped from 10% to 7%. These types of changes are not limited to censuses. We observed that the unaffiliated share in Sweden dropped about 10 points between the 2010 ISSP, which used a two-step measure, and the 2011 wave, which used a one-step measure.

Change 3: Changes in survey mode
Changes in survey mode may affect social desirability and coverage biases.

When monthly surveys carried out in Spain by the Center for Sociological Research changed from in-person to phone interviews in April 2020, there was an immediate jump of 5 percentage points in the share of respondents who said they were atheist, agnostic or indifferent toward religion (González and Cabrera 2023).

Many censuses and surveys have transitioned from in-person interviews to self-administered questionnaires. For example, in Hungary, the option to complete the census online or by mail in 2011 may have contributed significantly to the 9-point rise in the unaffiliated share of the population from the 2001 face-to-face census. By contrast, with the same options for completing the census in place in 2021, the unaffiliated share rose only 2 additional points.

A change from primarily face-to-face interviews to a mail-to-web format saw the “no religion” share of U.S. General Social Survey respondents rise 5 points from 2018 to 2021. Some of this increase may have been the result of more religious Americans, including older adults, being less willing to take the survey online (Schnabel et al. 2024).

Change 3: Changes in survey mode Changes in survey mode may affect social desirability and coverage biases. When monthly surveys carried out in Spain by the Center for Sociological Research changed from in-person to phone interviews in April 2020, there was an immediate jump of 5 percentage points in the share of respondents who said they were atheist, agnostic or indifferent toward religion (González and Cabrera 2023). Many censuses and surveys have transitioned from in-person interviews to self-administered questionnaires. For example, in Hungary, the option to complete the census online or by mail in 2011 may have contributed significantly to the 9-point rise in the unaffiliated share of the population from the 2001 face-to-face census. By contrast, with the same options for completing the census in place in 2021, the unaffiliated share rose only 2 additional points. A change from primarily face-to-face interviews to a mail-to-web format saw the “no religion” share of U.S. General Social Survey respondents rise 5 points from 2018 to 2021. Some of this increase may have been the result of more religious Americans, including older adults, being less willing to take the survey online (Schnabel et al. 2024).

The need to test the impact of measurement changes
When media coverage overlooks methodological issues, it may mislead the public (Hackett 2013; 2023; Hackett and Tong 2025; Hackett 2026). Reporters may emphasize what appears to be a large change while overlooking, omitting or being unaware of measurement artifacts that exaggerate the change (Berlinger 2017).

Survey and census organizations should research how changes in the way religion is measured affect results. Without such study, it is difficult to distinguish real social change from methodological artifacts. For all who seek to understand religious change, including journalists, religious leaders, policymakers, researchers and the public, it’s vital to disentangle the two (Hackett 2020). Organizations should publish the results of experiments to measure the impact of measurement change. Approaches may include:

Experiments with split-samples: When changing question format, respondents can be randomly assigned to the new and old conditions. Differences between the groups can be used to quantify the measurement effect.

Experiments with two modes: When survey modes are changing, a mode experiment may use the old and new mode of data collection (Pew Research Center 2021).

External data comparisons: While it would be ideal for organizations to conduct their own experiments, they may also evaluate the extent to which religious change has occurred on other high-quality surveys that have maintained consistent methodology during the period of interest.

Organizations should thoroughly describe their methodological changes and draw attention to how changes may affect trend data (Sullivan et al. 2012). Researchers, journalists, and the public need help understanding whether apparent change is primarily the result of measurement change.

The need to test the impact of measurement changes When media coverage overlooks methodological issues, it may mislead the public (Hackett 2013; 2023; Hackett and Tong 2025; Hackett 2026). Reporters may emphasize what appears to be a large change while overlooking, omitting or being unaware of measurement artifacts that exaggerate the change (Berlinger 2017). Survey and census organizations should research how changes in the way religion is measured affect results. Without such study, it is difficult to distinguish real social change from methodological artifacts. For all who seek to understand religious change, including journalists, religious leaders, policymakers, researchers and the public, it’s vital to disentangle the two (Hackett 2020). Organizations should publish the results of experiments to measure the impact of measurement change. Approaches may include: Experiments with split-samples: When changing question format, respondents can be randomly assigned to the new and old conditions. Differences between the groups can be used to quantify the measurement effect. Experiments with two modes: When survey modes are changing, a mode experiment may use the old and new mode of data collection (Pew Research Center 2021). External data comparisons: While it would be ideal for organizations to conduct their own experiments, they may also evaluate the extent to which religious change has occurred on other high-quality surveys that have maintained consistent methodology during the period of interest. Organizations should thoroughly describe their methodological changes and draw attention to how changes may affect trend data (Sullivan et al. 2012). Researchers, journalists, and the public need help understanding whether apparent change is primarily the result of measurement change.

NEW: We highlight 3 changes in measurement of religious “nones” & call for organizations that make these changes to study their effects.

From Matthew Conrad & me. www.surveypractice.org/article/1595...

6 days ago 28 9 2 1
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> the emperor is at war with the pope

what century is it

1 week ago 2329 357 16 35
A three-panel comic with Peter Parker (Spiderman in his civilian outfit) as the protagonist. The left hand side panel has Peter with a book open with the title "How to finish a paper". The right hand side panel has two images: on the top Peter reads in the book the phrase "Write It". In the bottom right panel, the third one, Peter sheds tears.

A three-panel comic with Peter Parker (Spiderman in his civilian outfit) as the protagonist. The left hand side panel has Peter with a book open with the title "How to finish a paper". The right hand side panel has two images: on the top Peter reads in the book the phrase "Write It". In the bottom right panel, the third one, Peter sheds tears.

Fellow academics/writers, I come bearing bad news:

#AcademicSky #WritingSky #AcWri #AmWriting #GetYourManuscriptOut

1 week ago 192 35 4 12

Okay this isn’t really happening anymore so I can tell you how l had “internal ICE sources”: the 3000 very stir-crazy ICE agents were all going wild on Minneapolis Tinder. Local girls would match with them and string them along for intel. They loved to brag about what they were doing all day

1 week ago 5565 983 91 322
A Mad Mess A sobering assessment of the systematic failures of mental health work.The United States is in the midst of a mental health crisis that cannot be ignored. Its effects are visible in overcrowded emergency rooms, homeless encampments, and frequent police encounters responding to people with serious mental illness. And yet, the many ways we attempt to support people with mental illness—from medical care to housing support to basic hygiene—seem to never take meaningful hold. All this despite the tireless work of professionals who attempt to help people bring together the pieces of a life. The problem is not in any individual effort to ameliorate the problem; it’s the many ways these programs fail to work together. For those with serious mental illness, and those who work to ameliorate it, there is no system. There is only mess. In A Mad Mess, sociologist Owen Whooley uncovers the exasperating barriers, bureaucratic mismatches, and threadbare resources that have made a mess of what should be a supportive system. Set in Albuquerque, New Mexico—a city whose struggles echo communities nationwide— the book reveals the challenges mental health workers face daily, from tedious paperwork to occasional violence. Whooley interviewed mental health workers at two local mental health services organizations, the specialized behavioral health division of the Albuquerque Police Department (APD), and a psychiatric emergency department at the University of New Mexico Hospital. Despite mostly good intentions and sometimes heroic efforts, he shows why this important work so often ends in failure. Written with deep sympathy and unflinching honesty, A Mad Mess reveals how the lack of a cohesive mental health system obstructs critical care and places roadblocks before front-line mental health workers at every turn. Most critically, for those who suffer from severe mental illness, these setbacks are a constant reminder that the institutions charged with helping them have left them on their own.

I’m a sociologist studying how mental health care breaks down when knowledge is uncertain and institutions don’t align.

My new book, A Mad Mess (University of Chicago Press, Dec), looks at why the mental health “system” isn’t a system at all.

1 week ago 11 4 1 1

Congratulations, Owen! This looks amazing.

1 week ago 2 0 0 0

Each day we explore a little more about whether is true that the President can stay irrational longer than you can stay a Constitutional Republic.

2 weeks ago 179 37 2 2

Immunotherapy has been such a revolution. Every time I hear a talk by one of the grad students in my centre I always want to shake them and say ‘you are so lucky to be part of this!’ and to my faculty colleagues ‘godspeed’. It all starts with #basicscience

2 weeks ago 32 9 0 0
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Went to go check on the flat earth crowd to see reactions to Artemis II and well yeh.

2 weeks ago 42 6 3 0
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The Fish Doorbell — The Fish Doorbell Did you spot a fish? Press the Fish Doorbell! This alerts our lock operator to let the fish through. The Fish Doorbell is in Utrecht, NL.

YOU GUYS it is Fish Doorbell season again!

visdeurbel.nl/en/

3 weeks ago 20 16 0 1
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It’s Taylors all the way down.

3 weeks ago 2 0 0 0

I would like some of the folks who signed the Harper’s letter or spent years yammering about the threat to free speech posed by Oberlin undergrads protesting eugenicists to bring an ounce of that energy to the state censoring entire disciplines.

3 weeks ago 578 205 9 4
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Florida bans sociology from core curriculum at state universities For years, Republican lawmakers and education leaders have argued that sociology — especially high-enrollment introductory courses — has been overtaken by progressive ideology

Big men scared of sociology, but it’s illegal to research why.

www.miamiherald.com/news/politic...

3 weeks ago 202 86 5 11
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The last Cesar Chavez Day (2026) Thanks to the California state legislature, the last Cesar Chavez Day was in 2025. March 31 will mark the holiday this year, renamed Farmworkers Day. Given the revelations of the past few days, thi…

The last Cesar Chavez Day (2026) politicsoutdoors.com/2026/03/26/t...

3 weeks ago 1 1 0 0
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Unintended consequences of federal restrictions on international students? Instead of small increases or small reductions, we saw massive declines in every province. Wonder why Universities are hurting?

www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...

3 weeks ago 2 3 0 0

Two things can be true, it’s a glass cliff and also she deserves it

3 weeks ago 1008 137 45 6
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‘A new world is being born’: author Rebecca Solnit on the ‘slow revolution’ the far right cannot tolerate It’s easy to focus on authoritarians and their petty victories. But zoom out and the picture is more encouraging, says the woman who popularised the term ‘mansplaining’, whether it’s in feminism, or t...

Rebecca Solnit finds reasons to be optimistic: "What the far right is doing globally, I think, is largely backlash. A new world is being born, and they’re basically trying to abort it. Which is a little ironic, given their views on abortion.”
www.theguardian.com/books/2026/m...

3 weeks ago 174 54 4 5

BASEBALL TODAY! Go Giants! 🧡🖤

3 weeks ago 3 0 0 0
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Kendra Duggar, wife of 19 Kids and Counting's Joseph Duggar, arrested | CBC News Two days after the arrest of former 19 Kids and Counting star Joseph Duggar, an arrest warrant for his wife Kendra Duggar was also issued and served.

More like “19 Arrests and Counting” amirite?

www.cbc.ca/news/enterta...

4 weeks ago 2 0 0 0
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https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2026/03/19/what-do-americans-consider-immoral/

https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2026/03/19/what-do-americans-consider-immoral/

What Americans consider immoral
www.pewresearch.org/religion/2026/03/19/what...

4 weeks ago 202 58 37 134

No idea. That is awful.

4 weeks ago 2 0 1 0

Let’s hope that, like so many things at ASA, after acting ridiculously entrenched on an issue, they will shift course and act as if this obvious change is what they supported all along. Good luck!

4 weeks ago 8 0 1 0

You were so young and hopeful before you were ground in the gears of the ASA!

1 month ago 8 0 1 0