One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
Main
What is Wrong with the Right?: poll shows c****av***s conspiracy theories spreading on the Right may hamper v*****e efforts
May 22, 2020 17:55:44   #
rumitoid
 
According to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll, 44 percent of Republicans believe that Bill Gates is plotting to use a mass C****-** v******tion campaign as a pretext to implant microchips in billions of people and monitor their movements — a widely debunked conspiracy theory with no basis in fact.

The survey, which was conducted May 20 and 21, found that only 26 percent of Republicans correctly identify the story as false.

In contrast, just 19 percent of Democrats believe the same spurious narrative about the Microsoft founder and public-health philanthropist. A majority of Democrats recognize that it’s not true.

As states relax their lockdown restrictions and responsibility for containing the c****av***s shifts, in part, to the American people, the vast gap between the right and the left over Gates reflects a growing problem: the dangerous, destabilizing tendency to ignore fundamental facts about the deadly pathogen in favor of misinformation peddled by partisans, including President Trump, and spread on social media.

That tendency is more widespread on the right, although liberals also believe some false narratives (including that C****-** deaths have already surged in states that were quick to reopen).

The new Yahoo News/YouGov poll found that this “choose your own reality” effect is distorting perceptions of nearly every aspect of the p******c, from reopening to v******tion to the official death toll. A broad majority of the public is either “very” (56 percent) or “somewhat” concerned (30 percent) about “false or misleading information being communicated about c****av***s.” That sentiment, at least, is not partisan: More than 80 percent of Democrats, Republicans and independents agree.

Yet blame for these concerns varies greatly by political affiliation. When Democrats are asked to select the top source of false or misleading information about the c****av***s, 56 percent pick the Trump administration; that number rises to 69 percent among Hillary Clinton v**ers. Republicans, however, point to the mainstream media (54 percent) as the primary culprit; 61 percent of Trump v**ers say likewise.

The result, in many cases, is two different sets of “facts” — only one of which resembles the t***h.

Take the Gates example. Half of all Americans (50 percent) who name Fox News as their primary television news source believe the disproven conspiracy theory, and 44 percent of v**ers who cast b****ts for Trump in 2016 do as well — even though neither Fox nor Trump has promoted it. At the same time, just 15 percent of MSNBC viewers and 12 percent of Clinton v**ers say the story is true.

The spread of such an outlandish charge may seem silly, but it could have catastrophic consequences. Through his namesake foundation, the tech billionaire has long championed v*****es in developing countries. So far, he has committed $300 million to combating the c****av***s. If large portions of the public believe that Gates’s intent is nefarious — and if they go on to convince themselves that any c****av***s v*****e will be dangerous — then many may refuse to get v******ted. (There is a parallel sentiment among some evangelicals to resist v******tion out of fear it would constitute the “mark of the beast” mentioned in the Book of Revelation.)

The more people refuse to get v******ted, the harder it becomes to end the p******c.
https://news.yahoo.com/new-yahoo-news-you-gov-poll-shows-c****av***s-conspiracy-theories-spreading-on-the-right-may-hamper-v*****e-efforts-152843610.html

Reply
May 22, 2020 19:20:02   #
Weewillynobeerspilly Loc: North central Texas
 
rumitoid wrote:
According to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll, 44 percent of Republicans believe that Bill Gates is plotting to use a mass C****-** v******tion campaign as a pretext to implant microchips in billions of people and monitor their movements — a widely debunked conspiracy theory with no basis in fact.

The survey, which was conducted May 20 and 21, found that only 26 percent of Republicans correctly identify the story as false.

In contrast, just 19 percent of Democrats believe the same spurious narrative about the Microsoft founder and public-health philanthropist. A majority of Democrats recognize that it’s not true.

As states relax their lockdown restrictions and responsibility for containing the c****av***s shifts, in part, to the American people, the vast gap between the right and the left over Gates reflects a growing problem: the dangerous, destabilizing tendency to ignore fundamental facts about the deadly pathogen in favor of misinformation peddled by partisans, including President Trump, and spread on social media.

That tendency is more widespread on the right, although liberals also believe some false narratives (including that C****-** deaths have already surged in states that were quick to reopen).

The new Yahoo News/YouGov poll found that this “choose your own reality” effect is distorting perceptions of nearly every aspect of the p******c, from reopening to v******tion to the official death toll. A broad majority of the public is either “very” (56 percent) or “somewhat” concerned (30 percent) about “false or misleading information being communicated about c****av***s.” That sentiment, at least, is not partisan: More than 80 percent of Democrats, Republicans and independents agree.

Yet blame for these concerns varies greatly by political affiliation. When Democrats are asked to select the top source of false or misleading information about the c****av***s, 56 percent pick the Trump administration; that number rises to 69 percent among Hillary Clinton v**ers. Republicans, however, point to the mainstream media (54 percent) as the primary culprit; 61 percent of Trump v**ers say likewise.

The result, in many cases, is two different sets of “facts” — only one of which resembles the t***h.

Take the Gates example. Half of all Americans (50 percent) who name Fox News as their primary television news source believe the disproven conspiracy theory, and 44 percent of v**ers who cast b****ts for Trump in 2016 do as well — even though neither Fox nor Trump has promoted it. At the same time, just 15 percent of MSNBC viewers and 12 percent of Clinton v**ers say the story is true.

The spread of such an outlandish charge may seem silly, but it could have catastrophic consequences. Through his namesake foundation, the tech billionaire has long championed v*****es in developing countries. So far, he has committed $300 million to combating the c****av***s. If large portions of the public believe that Gates’s intent is nefarious — and if they go on to convince themselves that any c****av***s v*****e will be dangerous — then many may refuse to get v******ted. (There is a parallel sentiment among some evangelicals to resist v******tion out of fear it would constitute the “mark of the beast” mentioned in the Book of Revelation.)

The more people refuse to get v******ted, the harder it becomes to end the p******c.
https://news.yahoo.com/new-yahoo-news-you-gov-poll-shows-c****av***s-conspiracy-theories-spreading-on-the-right-may-hamper-v*****e-efforts-152843610.html
According to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll, 44 perc... (show quote)



You should concern yourself more with the left, appears to me their States are getting their ass kicked by the v***s, and thats no conspiracy, skippy.........move along, this topic was dead before you hit send.

Reply
May 22, 2020 22:08:25   #
Redangel62
 
rumitoid wrote:
According to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll, 44 percent of Republicans believe that Bill Gates is plotting to use a mass C****-** v******tion campaign as a pretext to implant microchips in billions of people and monitor their movements — a widely debunked conspiracy theory with no basis in fact.

The survey, which was conducted May 20 and 21, found that only 26 percent of Republicans correctly identify the story as false.

In contrast, just 19 percent of Democrats believe the same spurious narrative about the Microsoft founder and public-health philanthropist. A majority of Democrats recognize that it’s not true.

As states relax their lockdown restrictions and responsibility for containing the c****av***s shifts, in part, to the American people, the vast gap between the right and the left over Gates reflects a growing problem: the dangerous, destabilizing tendency to ignore fundamental facts about the deadly pathogen in favor of misinformation peddled by partisans, including President Trump, and spread on social media.

That tendency is more widespread on the right, although liberals also believe some false narratives (including that C****-** deaths have already surged in states that were quick to reopen).

The new Yahoo News/YouGov poll found that this “choose your own reality” effect is distorting perceptions of nearly every aspect of the p******c, from reopening to v******tion to the official death toll. A broad majority of the public is either “very” (56 percent) or “somewhat” concerned (30 percent) about “false or misleading information being communicated about c****av***s.” That sentiment, at least, is not partisan: More than 80 percent of Democrats, Republicans and independents agree.

Yet blame for these concerns varies greatly by political affiliation. When Democrats are asked to select the top source of false or misleading information about the c****av***s, 56 percent pick the Trump administration; that number rises to 69 percent among Hillary Clinton v**ers. Republicans, however, point to the mainstream media (54 percent) as the primary culprit; 61 percent of Trump v**ers say likewise.

The result, in many cases, is two different sets of “facts” — only one of which resembles the t***h.

Take the Gates example. Half of all Americans (50 percent) who name Fox News as their primary television news source believe the disproven conspiracy theory, and 44 percent of v**ers who cast b****ts for Trump in 2016 do as well — even though neither Fox nor Trump has promoted it. At the same time, just 15 percent of MSNBC viewers and 12 percent of Clinton v**ers say the story is true.

The spread of such an outlandish charge may seem silly, but it could have catastrophic consequences. Through his namesake foundation, the tech billionaire has long championed v*****es in developing countries. So far, he has committed $300 million to combating the c****av***s. If large portions of the public believe that Gates’s intent is nefarious — and if they go on to convince themselves that any c****av***s v*****e will be dangerous — then many may refuse to get v******ted. (There is a parallel sentiment among some evangelicals to resist v******tion out of fear it would constitute the “mark of the beast” mentioned in the Book of Revelation.)

The more people refuse to get v******ted, the harder it becomes to end the p******c.
https://news.yahoo.com/new-yahoo-news-you-gov-poll-shows-c****av***s-conspiracy-theories-spreading-on-the-right-may-hamper-v*****e-efforts-152843610.html
According to a new Yahoo News/YouGov poll, 44 perc... (show quote)


Again, moral narcissism. Study it then get help

Reply
 
 
May 23, 2020 00:52:33   #
rumitoid
 
Weewillynobeerspilly wrote:
You should concern yourself more with the left, appears to me their States are getting their ass kicked by the v***s, and thats no conspiracy, skippy.........move along, this topic was dead before you hit send.


Okay, ty for your opinion, but try reading recent reports.

Reply
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
Main
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.