To some extent yes, but who knows what influence a priest enamoured with protestantism and it’s leanings and it’s forms of worship may have, and what does the act of going to Mass at a parish like that have on that same individual vs. the SSPX? It’s impossible to weigh and generalize.
I once was in a vile liberal Catholic parish (the pastor told my wife I was a “reactionary”). I sometimes would sneak over to the Assembly of God. Not only did I love the charismatic services, but the pastor was very cooperative with Catholic programs, very supportive of JP II, often quoted from C. S. Lewis, and his sermons were far better than the vile parish, where the sermons were taken from the daily newspaper.
It was tempting to say “I’ll maintain as a Catholic, but I have to go where I’m going to be fed”. Many, many Catholics did this, and ended up exclusively at the Assembly. They are still at the Assembly now, where the next pastor is much weaker than the one I liked, and anti-Catholicism is no longer banned. The bishop allowed the liberal Catholic pastor to serve out till retirement, and the next pastor is far more orthodox. Other, more extreme liberal pastors, either toned down or left the priesthood.
The Assembly of God does not have dioceses or a living Magisterium. So it is the luck of the draw, and people make bad long term commitments based on temporary comforts.
I learned that “visiting” a place outside the direct, living Magisterium can lead to bad decisions. The local diocese, as much as I have waved my fist at not only liberalism but gross inefficiency, etc, is a kind of safety net in the long run.
“Temporary” solutions, even if there are valid things included, often turn off to be permanent, and offer more problems than they solve if they are outside the living Magisterium, and a diocese.