Why do some ideas limp along for years and then suddenly jump to public acceptance seemingly overnight? Why can the tiny minority opposed to a government languish for decades and then suddenly succeed? Scientists say they have an answer. The magic is in winning 10 percent of the population.
I never seem to be part of majorities. In fact, I typically find myself in a very small minority — sometimes a minority of one. The people I’m attracted to have never been like everybody else, either. Most of all, though, the iconoclastic ideas that I fall in love with are rarely popular with most people. And when you’re in those sorts of minorities, you get accustomed to staying there.
Social scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute are now offering hope for the crazy people like me — and maybe you — who believe in ideas that others reject. Their research suggests that you don’t have to win a majority to change a population. You merely have to find 10 percent of the population to agree with you:

Goodbye, Dagny (2004-2019)
Reaction to Googler’s memo says, ‘Diversity is good if you conform’
Moral principle: What you do with your money is your business
Is ‘majority rule’ moral even when the majority don’t want freedom?
Unexpected proposal leaves me pondering my craving to be loved
Well-meaning parents stifle kids by trying to make their decisions
Reading through hundreds of my old articles has been unsettling
Suicide’s what happens when you can’t find reasons to keep living
Each loss makes me feel grateful for the irreplaceable ones I love