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#primaried — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #primaried, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The Outrage Industry is talk radio, cable news shows, and political blogs.
    The #outrage #industry dictates the behavior of elected officials (particularly conservatives) who are terrified of getting on its wrong side because they know if they do, they will be #primaried.
    Outrage discourse, as a rule, ignores complexity and nuance. It is not about conveying accurate information or stimulating meaningful discourse.

    ♦️Outrage arose because it was #profitable
    ♦️Outrage created or exacerbated the problem of #polarization, not the other way around.

    Because of the fragmenting of media and the clutter of outlets, blogs, and talk shows, there is a lot of noise.
    There is also a lot of #money in the outrage business.

    🔸Outlets or pundits in search of an audience need to break through.
    🔸The easiest way to break through is to be an “agent provocateur."

    Both sides use the same tactics but #conservative #outrage is more outrageous, more hyperbolic, and more prone to misrepresenting the facts.
    The conservatives are better at all things outrage–including making money.

    terikanefield.com/invented-nar

  2. “The evolution of cooperation required out-group #hatred, which is really sad,” said Nicholas Christakis, a Yale sociologist

    This is just as true on today’s political stage. There are two major parties, and their contests are viewed as zero-sum outcomes.

    #Win or #lose.

    The presidency is the ultimate example: There are no consolation prizes for the loser.

    No researcher argues that human nature is the sole, or even the primary, cause of today’s #polarization.

    But savvy political operatives can exploit, leverage and encourage it.
    And those operatives are learning from their triumphs in #divide-and-#conquer politics.

    Here’s where psychology gives way to political science.

    The American political system may cultivate “out-group” hatred, as academics put it.

    🔹One of the scarce resources in this country is political #power at the highest levels of government. 🔹

    The country has no parliamentary system in which multiple parties form governing #coalitions.

    Add to this fact 🔹#redistricting that ensures there are fewer truly #competitive congressional races.🔹

    The two parties have inexorably moved further apart ideologically, and leaders are more likely to be punished — “#primaried” — if they reach across the aisle.

    And because many more districts are now 🔹deeply red or blue, 🔹rather than a mix of constituencies, House members have fewer reasons to adopt moderate positions.

    washingtonpost.com/science/202