Upvoted because this is an important topic I’ve seen little discussion of. Although you take pains to draw attention to the limitations of this data set, these caveats aren’t included in the conclusion, so I’d be wary of anyone acting on this verbatim. I’d be interested in seeing drop out rates in other social movements to give a better idea of the base rate.
Upvoted because this is an important topic I’ve seen little discussion of. Although you take pains to draw attention to the limitations of this data set, these caveats aren’t included in the conclusion, so I’d be wary of anyone acting on this verbatim. I’d be interested in seeing drop out rates in other social movements to give a better idea of the base rate.
I agree. Other movement data would be interesting. The most relevant data I have seen is various veg rate studies (which generally shows like 80% dropout overall or the average person staying veg ~4 years). e.g. https://animalcharityevaluators.org/research/dietary-impacts/vegetarian-recidivism/