Monday, May 6, 2019
Search Me?
“Going
forward, while people will still be able to demonstrate pride in their ethnic
heritage,
we will
not tolerate praise or support for white nationalism and separatism.”
Facebook
Post, March 27th.
Can Americans ever
get along again?
Trying to
understand the underpinnings of the conservative-liberal schism tearing our
nation apart is beyond complex. For those who place their assumption that
Republicans are more gullible and bent towards accepting “conspiracy theories,”
think again. “A [recent] study found the extent to which conspiratorial
thinking and partisan reasoning inspire beliefs in election-related conspiracy
theories... The researchers analyzed a survey of 1,230 Americans taken before
and after the 2012 Presidential Election to see why some people believed
conspiracy theories about fraud affecting the results… As far as who is
more likely to believe in conspiracy theories, the study found no particular
difference between the groups, meaning that both Republicans and Democrats are
likely to have conspiracists in their midst.” BigThink.com, 9/27/17
Education and
age are significant variables. Pew Research tracks party affiliation on an
ongoing basis, but their pre-Trump analysis (April 2015) is quite valuable. “Education. Democrats
lead by 22 points (57%-35%) in leaned party identification among adults with
post-graduate degrees. The Democrats’ edge is narrower among those with college
degrees or some post-graduate experience (49%-42%), and those with less
education (47%-39%). Across all educational categories, women are more
likely than men to affiliate with the Democratic Party or lean Democratic. The
Democrats’ advantage is 35 points (64%-29%) among women with post-graduate
degrees, but only eight points (50%-42%) among post-grad men.
“Generations. Millennials
continue to be the most Democratic age cohort; 51% identify as
Democrats or lean Democratic, compared with 35% who identify with the GOP or
lean Republican. There are only slight differences in partisan affiliation
between older and younger millennials. Republicans have a four-point lead among
the Silent Generation (47%-43%), the most Republican age cohort.”
But what
really polarizes voters is their underlying value system, particularly rural vs
urban. Born of a dependency on unpredictable weather patterns and decimation
from natural disasters, almost by definition, the farming roots of rural values
are anchored in religion. Over the years, scientific achievements have
accelerated agricultural productivity, but dependence on God’s blessings continues
to dominate. Likewise, there is a very different perception of guns in rural
areas vs the close quarters of too many people in crowded cities, where mass
killings are so much more easily effected.
“There's
a spreading
revolt against city-spawned restrictions on self-defense rights by the
residents of sparsely settled counties and the officials who represent them.
The issue ‘has largely underscored the rift between rural and urban areas,’
the Wall Street Journal noted over
the weekend. [A March 10th WSJ piece captioned: Rural Sheriffs Defy New Gun
Measures ‘Second Amendment sanctuary’ counties say they won’t enforce
background checks, other gun-control proposals.] It's a rift that's widening as
the political divide in the United States takes on a strongly geographical
character—less along state or regional lines than at the borders between dense
populations and open country.
“With hostile
people from divergent cultures and political affiliations glaring at each other
across the nation's city limits, it's time to reconsider the tendency towards centralization
of power in our country that leaves so many people groaning under laws and
policies they find abhorrent. If we really want to defuse tensions, we should
devolve decision-making as far down the political food chain as
possible—preferably all the way to individuals.
“‘Virtually
every major city (100,000-plus population) in the United States of America has
a different outlook from the less populous areas that are closest to it,’ Josh Kron marveled
in The
Atlantic after the 2012 election demonstrated divisions that have only
deepened since… Six years later, the 2018 mid-term election ‘results exacerbate
a divide between booming urban centers and struggling rural communities that
has been growing since the recession a decade ago,’ The Hill reported.
Democrats are increasingly urban in terms of their support, while Republicans
have come to rely on rural voters. The parties seem to battle only over the
suburbs.
“Values and
policy preferences, not just party affiliation, break down along geographic
lines. ‘Americans in urban and rural communities have widely different views
when it comes to social and political issues, including their assessments of
President Donald Trump and opinions about race, immigration, same-sex marriage,
abortion and the role of government,’ the Pew Research Center found
in 2018.” Reason.com, March 13th. These are the same irreconcilable
differences that pushed the United States into the Civil War in April of 1861.
Will these
differences die off as the educated younger generations supplant their elders,
as the urban tsunami skews increasingly where the vast majority of Americans
live? Or will the remaining minorities become even more desperate, digging in
and squaring off. The rural adherents have a whole lot more guns than their
urban counterparts. A June 22, 2017 Pew Social Trends report tells us: “Among
those who live in rural areas, 46% say they are gun owners, compared
with 28% of those who live in the suburbs and 19% in urban areas.”
The battle
lines are everywhere, and while social media is the land of conspiracy
theorists and presidential tweets, there is a tendency from those on the right
to believe that search engines and, excepting platforms like Fox News and
Breitbart, online news media skew left. Left-leaning proponents respond that
“facts” tend to refute too many right-wing claims and that the perceived “skew”
is nothing more than an aversion to facts. Left and right have drawn lines in
the sand over the “biases” they see in search engines.
“The idea
that Google is subtly pushing masses of voters to the left has the ring of
conspiracy, and thus the work of Robert Epstein is warmly embraced by
conservative lawmakers — as well as a president — convinced that Big Tech is
plotting against them… Yet even some scholars who think the San Diego-based
psychologist is wrong about the political impact of search engines — he
believes bias built into Google’s processes could have cost Republicans three
California congressional districts in the last election — have started paying
attention to his detailed work on how voters respond to tens of thousands of
search results.
“At a moment
when misinformation about search engines and social media bias is rampant, with
both the left and the right amplifying unsupported claims, Epstein is asking
the right questions, they say, about the unseen power of algorithms and how
little most Americans understand about the way they work… The saga of the
persistent San Diego psychologist versus the tech giant is a long-running one,
full of twists. As Big Data shapes our opinions in ways scholars are only
beginning to comprehend, his work has increasingly caught attention.
“‘The larger
issue he is looking at is extremely important,’ said Ramesh Srinivasan, a
professor of information studies at UCLA who focuses on the relationships
between technology and politics. Srinivasan is not convinced by the claims from
conservatives that the GOP is being victimized, but he argues scholars need to
look more deeply at how search engines can shape the views of those who use
them.
“‘We turn to
these efficient technologies,’ he said, ‘to do almost everything these days
without knowing why we see what we see from them or what data is collected
about us and how it is being used.’… Epstein, a former Psychology Today editor
in chief who runs a nonprofit institute in California, calls the phenomenon he
has explored the search engine manipulation effect…. ‘These are new forms of
manipulation people can’t see,’ he said. The technologies ‘can have an enormous
impact on voters who are undecided. ... People have no awareness the influence
is being exerted.’
“Google
dismisses his research as the work of a misguided amateur. Company Chief
Executive Sundar Pichai said at a House Judiciary Committee hearing in December
that Google had investigated Epstein’s findings and found his methodology
flawed…
“In his
latest study, which he and a co-author plan to present in April at the 99th
annual meeting of the Western Psychological Assn., in Pasadena, Epstein tracked
47,300 searches by dozens of undecided voters in the districts of newly elected
California Democratic Reps. Katie Porter, Harley Rouda and Mike Levin.
“Mainstream
outlets, including the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times, dominated the
Google search results. By contrast, searches conducted on Yahoo and Bing more
often showcased links from deeply conservative outfits such as Breitbart.
“Using a
model he has developed to gauge the subliminal effect of what he sees as tilted
search results, Epstein projected that 35,455 voters who’d been on the fence
were persuaded to vote for a Democrat entirely because of the sources Google
fed them.
“That
conclusion is subject to much dispute… Srinivasan questions how many undecided
voters use Google to help decide how to cast ballots… Safiya Noble, a UCLA
professor and author of ‘Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce
Racism,’ is troubled by what she sees as an argument that search engines ought
to counterbalance the content of large, well-resourced and highly trained
newsrooms with ‘disinformation sites’ and ‘propaganda outlets.’” Evan Halper writing
for the March 27th Los Angeles Times. Today, no one seems willing to agree to
disagree.
With many
pending state and federal investigations of potential Trump empire financial
irregularities, many possibly criminal, Trump is doubling down (the GOP is
celebrating) based on his now regularly-repeated refrain that he is totally
vindicated by the ambiguous DoJ summary of the Mueller findings. Trump and the
GOP – still very much in control of Senate investigatory committees – are
leaning towards a full-on attack against their critics and based on how
“misinformation” was planted by Democrats. We are about to witness American
polarization on steroids. Despite a few scattered “wishes” to the contrary,
those lines in the sand between left and right not only confuse and squeeze the
once-dominant middle, they are increasingly unmovable walls that make Trump’s
Mexican vanity wall look incredibly thin and penetrable.
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