Study suggests social media is key contributor to self-censorship

Most Republican voters support childhood vaccine mandates, yet may be discouraged from publicly expressing these views, a new study suggests.

To determine the source of this disconnect, researchers conducted a survey that revealed differences between Republican voters who support childhood vaccine mandates and those who do not.

According to the study, most Republicans surveyed supported immunization requirements for children and held favorable attitudes toward vaccine safety, while those who said they opposed vaccine mandates did not acknowledge this support exists – and expressed a greater willingness to share their vaccine views to others.

In contrast, the Republicans who supported vaccine mandates were largely aware that their views were in the majority, but tended to be less outspoken.

This phenomenon, called the false consensus effect, describes a misperception by people about how widespread their views are and a belief that their opinions are shared by others – when they are not.

“Those in the majority may simply sit out of the conversation because they see online environments as being dominated by extreme views and don’t want to engage in uncivil discourse,” said Dixon. “What’s significant is that those in the majority may self-silence even when they are aware of their majority status.”

The study was recently published in Human Communication Research.

      • @667
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        222 months ago

        “The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.” —George Orwell, Ninteen Eighty-four

        • @dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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          72 months ago

          I can’t help but wonder if 1984 is art imitating life, or the playbook for modern-day facists. Regardless, it’s creepy af how near accurate it has become.

          • @xkforce@lemmy.world
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            92 months ago

            1984 was released in 1949 back when fascism and totalitarianism were still fresh in the minds of WWII era europeans. It was neither unprecedented nor would it be the last time 1984 rang alarm bells for the real world.

          • Granbo's Holy Hotrod
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            72 months ago

            No, it’s just not a new thing. We are in the fascism cycle … hopefully the back side gives us another golden period.

            • @SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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              62 months ago

              anacyclosis - The word anacyclosis has been variously translated as “the cycle of political revolution” and “the cycle of the constitutions.” In short, the theory states that the six regime archetypes that the Greeks identified and which we still use today (monarchy, tyranny, aristocracy, oligarchy, democracy, and ochlocracy or mob-rule) each represent different stages of one long process of political evolution.

      • @Syn_Attck@lemmy.today
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        42 months ago

        Same for any leftists that don’t tow the party line on a given issue.

        Almost as if it’s about ingroup/outgroup identifiers and group consensus.

  • @Fixbeat@lemmy.ml
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    182 months ago

    I suspect a lot of these Republicans stay silent on all the nazi style shit their party is doing too. Hopefully they stay home or vote D.

    • My job has a huge chunk of Republicans. They absolutely cherry pick specific things.

      We’ll do the nazi thing if it stops people asking for abortion. We’ll do the “kill immigrants” thing if trans people can’t walk into bathrooms.

  • Republicans treat their politics like religion. You don’t get to question it. You will conform or be ostracized. Your group has the right [god/politics], all the others are outsiders to be converted or fought against. Do what the man in the pulpit or on the screen says, he has all the answers and will fix all your problems. You just gotta believe. Huge amounts of peer pressure to conform, so even if you think differently about something you keep your mouth shut.

  • @Gigan@lemmy.world
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    -182 months ago

    I think a lot of Democrats do this too, just on different issues. Both parties have really been taken over by extremists.

    • @Glowstick@lemmy.world
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      212 months ago

      Care to tell us some specific people who you think are extremists in the democratic party? And which particular policy positions you think are extreme?

      • @rezifon@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I’ve learned to keep my mouth shut when my liberal/progressive friends discuss gun control. The left side of that debate is marbled with misunderstandings, misrepresentations of fact, and flawed reasoning.

        Gun control isn’t a very important issue to me, but much of the liberal side of the debate just makes me cringe. I’ve learned to just shut up about it, though, because when I speak up I usually get shouted down and abused for going against the groupthink.

        No fucking way I ever vote Republican again, though.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          42 months ago

          What you think is the “left side” of that debate… isn’t. The two factions you see fighting are both moderates/liberals, but who differ in their level of authoritarianism.

          In contrast, actual leftists are folks like the Black Panthers. As the saying goes, “if you go far enough left you get your guns back.”

        • JackGreenEarth
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          -152 months ago

          What, you think people have unrestricted access to death machines is ok?

          • It’s complicated my good sir.

            I am a brown person. We do not have the same luxuries when we are stopped by the police. We get harassed by racists. BLM protests where we were armed were the most peaceful. While the ones where we weren’t were filled with abusive riot police.

            I do not want death machines. But when death machines already exist and are in the hands of evil men, I have little choice.

            • JackGreenEarth
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              12 months ago

              Well then banning them stops them being in everyone’s hands, ‘evil’ people included. This just sounds like the ‘good person with a gun to stop a bad person with a gun’ argument.

      • @xkforce@lemmy.world
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        72 months ago

        There really isnt anything equivalent in the mainstream left. i.e no equivalent to the right’s rhetoric about trans people and immigrants.

        There are however a few things that would make me hesitate discussing like GMOs and nuclear power.

      • @Gigan@lemmy.world
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        -152 months ago

        No, I’m not interested in debating random people online. If you can’t think of anything yourself you might be in a bubble and should expand your sources of information.

        • JackGreenEarth
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          92 months ago

          If you don’t want to debate, that’s fine, but it’s unreasonable to expect us to do your work for you.

        • Gigan is a Russian troll. Don’t ask me for anymore details, I’m not interested in debating random people online. If you can’t find my reasons for saying this yourself you might be in a bubble and should expand your sources of information.

    • @dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      While I agree with the heart of your sentiment, I feel that anybody center and to the right of center are by far the worst of the two evils.

        • @dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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          12 months ago

          Mostly through personal experiences. I live in a red county in a mostly red state. I once somehow pissed a vet off because he assumed I was conservative based solely on my appearance. In his words, I looked too cool to not be republican. That was probably the saddest, yet funniest, experience I’ve had.

          I’ve lost decades-old friends because of their right-leaning ideologies. Never once had I put them down for their beliefs. But they were quick to call me an idiot or zombie or otherwise insult my intelligence because I dared think different than them. Suffice it to say, I am not friends with them anymore.

          The friends that I do have are my friends because I steer clear of talking politics. Not that I haven’t tried. But somehow, even my so-called left-leaning friends seem to think differently than me. Maybe it’s me. I don’t know.

          I like to think I’m fairly open-minded. There are things I won’t change my mind about, but I will listen to what other people have to say and I won’t insult them for it.

          I don’t know. It’s ultimately how I feel as a whole. For the most part I know most people are good people, even if they’re misguided. But it’s that vocal minority that espouse nothing but vitriol and hate and revel in other people’s misery that I have a problem with. And those people are more often than not, center or right of center as far as I can tell.

            • @dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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              12 months ago

              I feel like I do not have a lot in common with them. Their ideals and mine do not align. Do I hate them? Not inherently, no. But I do very much disagree with their ideals and their methods. There are a few individuals I wouldn’t mind seeing leaving office sooner rather than later. But that’s a pipe dream.