[Peace-discuss] Truth vs. truthiness

Szoke, Ron r-szoke at illinois.edu
Tue Dec 1 05:07:44 UTC 2020


Most Republicans Say They Doubt the Election. How Many Really Mean It?
Emily Badger
NYT  Mon, November 30, 2020  
Since the election, surveys have consistently found that about 70% to 80% of Republicans don’t buy the results. They don’t agree that Joe Biden won fair and square. They say the election was rigged. And they say enough fraud occurred to tip the outcome.

Those numbers sound alarmingly high, and they imply that the overwhelming majority of people in one political party in America doubt the legitimacy of a presidential election. But the reality is more complicated, political scientists say. Research has shown that the answers that partisans (on the left as well as on the right) give to political questions often reflect not what they know as fact, but what they wish were true. Or what they think they should say.

It is incredibly hard to separate sincere belief from wishful thinking from what political scientists call partisan cheerleading. But on this topic especially, the distinctions matter a lot. Are Republican voters merely expressing support for the president by standing by his claims of fraud — in effectively the same way Republicans in Congress have — or have they accepted widespread fraud as true? Do these surveys suggest a real erosion in faith in American elections, or something more familiar, and temporary?

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[ I think "truthiness" means statements that sound as if they OUGHT to be true because they tend to reduce cognitive dissonance.  ~ RSz. ]   


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