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[return to "My "Are you presuming most people are stupid?" test"]
1. stephe+lc[view] [source] 2025-06-24 19:25:54
>>jger15+(OP)
How many people drive their car daily or near daily? How many people are good drivers?

The ratio of those two values shows, in my experience, that a lot of people are not very good at things they spend a lot of time doing, and are generally unaware of their own shortcomings

The average American spends 4.2 hours a week in the car. A typical 40 year old american has driven around 50,000 miles. For someone to continue to be bad at driving after that much experience, it must be a fundamental limitation on their capabilities for learning, thinking, or understanding. Drive to work any given day in Denver and you will see that a large number of people suffer from those fundamental limitations.

This article seems to present a world where most people the author interacts with can think critically about a complex topic, and are interested in learning or improving themselves. I wish I lived where the author lives, because I have had multiple jobs across multiple countries and never encountered an average population like the author describes.

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2. cjs_ac+Qg[view] [source] 2025-06-24 19:47:23
>>stephe+lc
The driving example is interesting, because I think there are two different groups of people assessing the 'goodness' of their driving and others' driving by two different standards. One group thinks a 'good' driver is one that is skilled at driving a car; the other group thinks that a 'good' driver is the one that does the 'nice' thing in any given situation. The 'skilled' drivers look at the 'nice' drivers and think that the 'nice' drivers are unskilled and display little interest in reaching their destination. The 'nice' drivers think the 'skilled' drivers are dangerous.
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