In my experience people need outside help in seeing their own blind spots. Outside of a work environment it seems that a trusted friend or partner is as good a helper as anyone. I'd suspect that if you looked back on some of those times you shifted your opinion it started by having your perspective opened by another, or a trusted individual sharing some information. I know even posters I've trusted on this very board have led to some change for me. Very few of us will ever pop up out of bed one day and say "Hot damn I was wrong about xxxx!" it is usually a gradual process of having your views slowly shifted until you arrive at a new position. Radicalization doesn't happen over night and neither does the reverse.
If that's what you meant, fair enough.
What I was really saying was the motivation to change your views comes from within.
And I think just about anyone can be swayed, even if as you say the time to outcome ratio isn't something everyone wants to tackle (trust me, I'm not trying to suggest you have to engage anyone you don't find value in) . Part of the battle isn't in totally pulling someone into the fold either. There are battles to be one on softening people's stances, getting them part way to truth or atleast getting them to throw off some of their previously more radicalized views.
I agree that progress is made when you can soften someone's stance. I guess we disagree on whether it's possible to soften just about anyone. They have to have at least the seed of motivation to learn.
I don't know about everyone else but a view conversations here as having a few levels. There is obviously the direct back and forth we have with one another. But there are also the lurkers to consider, there are plenty of people who read here but never post (I was one of them for years). I also often take lessons I learn here and apply them to my in real life conversations. Just because your direct interactions with a poster don't shift their position it doesn't mean that it has no value.
Also a fair point.
The part I find dehumanizing is that I see you as saying "if people don't respond or handle situations the way I would then they are brain damaged". I may vehemently disagree with them but that doesn't mean I can't acknowledge that there are countless ways they arrived at their positions and continue to hold to them. I understand this was likely just rethorical flourish but it hit me wrong this morning.
Yes, "brain damaged" was just an expression of frustration.
But I will completely cop to the fact that I am impatient with certain types of people. I've said this here before: talking to some people is like talking to a wall littered with graffiti. It doesn't matter what you say to the wall; it can't listen, and will always respond with the same message that's been up there since it was spray-painted. If people respond to me like a graffiti-littered wall, I will lose interest in them. There are plenty of people to talk to who aren't like that, who will actually reward the time you spend with them rather than waste it.
Religion is for people whose existential fear is greater than their common sense.
The god idea is popular with desperate people.