Meh. It would show more perceptiveness on your part if you based your prediction on parameters that correlate more highly with political views than education does. Income and profession are examples. Investment bankers are conservative, intelligent, and rich 1%ers, with little sympathy for working class people. People with higher income in analytical professions like engineering, technology, and pharmaceutical development are also intelligent conservatives.
You need to find the exceptions in your model (i.e. intelligent conservatives, and below average liberals) to develop a more accurate set of adjustments to your predictive rules.
I feel this way about conservatives
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Meh. It would show more perceptiveness on your part if you based your prediction on parameters that correlate more highly with political views than education does. Income and profession are examples. Investment bankers are conservative, intelligent, and rich 1%ers, with little sympathy for working class people. People with higher income in analytical professions like engineering, technology, and pharmaceutical development are also intelligent conservatives.
You need to find the exceptions in your model (i.e. intelligent conservatives, and below average liberals) to develop a more accurate set of adjustments to your predictive rules.