The Far Right Represents Only 6% of the U.S. Citizens, Study Says

Authored by fortune.com and submitted by MacNCheezOnUrKneez
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Researchers looking into political and social divides in America said in a new study that only 6% of American fit the definition of far right, people who feel that America is under threat and they’re the last line of defense in protecting traditional values with strident uncompromising views. On the other end of the political spectrum, the study identified 8% of Americans as “Progressive Activists” on the far left, focused on equity, fairness, and the direction American is taking. Compared to those on the right, this group is more secular and urban, and rejects traditional authority while trying to rectify “historical injustices.”

The study, called “Hidden Tribes,” broke out results into seven categories, with 67% of those surveyed falling into what researchers labeled the “Exhausted Majority.” This largest grouping looks for common ground, has opinions based on situations instead of conforming to strict ideologies—and hates polarization.

The research also compares results from its study with standard demographic categories, such as religious affiliation, gender, stated political affiliation, and race or ethnicity.

Researchers used uniformity of answers to certain core questions to sort out the groupings. This resulted in a single far-left progressive slot (8%), and both the far-right Devoted Conservatives (6%), and a slightly less rigid, but still dogmatic right-wing “Traditional Conservatives” group (19%).

The Hidden Tribes of America https://t.co/T02DacXUPm “We have become a set of tribes, with different codes, values, and even facts. We no longer just disagree; we reject each other’s premises and doubt each other’s motives. We block our ears to diverse perspectives.” pic.twitter.com/pKCJPQaqVu — Steve Case (@SteveCase) October 18, 2018

Those three categories the study defines as left-wing and right-wing answer polarizing questions identically. For instance, asked whether feminists either fight for important issues or “just attack men,” 96% of Progressive Activists agreed with important issues, while 92% of Devoted Conservatives said “attack men.”

Similarly, on police brutality, 95% of Progressive Activists agreed police were more violent towards African Americans than people of other races, while 93% of Devoted Conservatives said police were mostly fair towards people of every race.

Over 8,000 U.S. citizens, selected to be statistically representative of the population based on census data, participated in the survey conducted over the last year.

superflippy on October 23rd, 2018 at 15:13 UTC »

The site with the article is pretty terrible in my browser, so here's a link to the study itself: The Hidden Tribes of America

hamhead on October 23rd, 2018 at 12:39 UTC »

No surprise there. As Jon Stewart once said, crazy controls because the rest of us have shit to do.

Scubalefty on October 23rd, 2018 at 12:37 UTC »

Yeah, but they have disproportionate representation, so their ideas rule even when they suck ...

Study: Politicians think voters are way more conservative than they actually are

> Politicians tend to vastly overestimate just how conservative their constituents really are. The paper, co-authored by Christopher Skovron of the University of Michigan and David Broockman of the University of California Berkeley, finds that conservative politicians in particular are terrible at gauging the political views of their constituents. For example, they tend to underestimate support for policies like universal health care and same-sex marriage by as much as 20 percentage points. Liberal politicians underestimate support for those policies, too, but not by nearly as much.

>The authors report this especially stunning distillation of their findings: “Nearly half of sitting conservative officeholders appear to believe that they represent a district that is more conservative on these issues than the most conservative legislative district in the entire country.”