One in five US adults condone ‘justified’
political violence, mega-survey finds
As mistrust and alienation from democratic
institutions peaks, researchers explore how willing Americans are to commit
violence
Ed
Pilkington in New York
@edpilkington
Wed 20 Jul
2022 06.00 BST
One in five
adults in the United States, equivalent to about 50 million people, believe
that political violence is justified at least in some circumstances, a new
mega-survey has found.
A team of
medical and public health scientists at the University of California, Davis
enlisted the opinions of almost 9,000 people across the country to explore how
far willingness to engage in political violence now goes.
They discovered
that mistrust and alienation from democratic institutions have reached such a
peak that substantial minorities of the American people now endorse violence as
a means towards political ends. “The prospect of large-scale violence in the
near future is entirely plausible,” the scientists warn.
A hard-core
rump of the US population, the survey recorded – amounting to 3% or by
extrapolation 7 million people – believe that political violence is usually or
always justified. Almost one in four of the respondents – equivalent to more
than 60 million Americans – could conceive of violence being justified “to
preserve an American way of life based on western European traditions”.
Most
alarmingly, 7.1% said that they would be willing to kill a person to advance an
important political goal. The UC Davis team points out that, extrapolated to US
society at large, that is the equivalent of 18 million Americans.
The study,
Views of American Democracy and Society and Support for Political Violence, was
led by Garen Wintemute, Sonia Robinson and Andrew Crawford and has been
published on the preprint server MedRxiv. Over three weeks beginning on 3 May,
the UC Davis researchers gathered the views of a representative sample of 8,620
people nationwide.
The scientists
set out to discover just how open individuals in America are to engaging in
political violence given the pummeling US democracy has taken in recent years.
Extreme political polarization, skepticism about government and democratic
institutions, rising gun violence and increased firearms sales, together with
the rampant spread of conspiracy theories and misinformation have combined into
a toxic soup.
Its
consequences were on display on 6 January 2021 when hundreds of Trump
supporters and white supremacists stormed the US Capitol building, leading to
the deaths of seven people and scores of injuries. Congressional hearings into
January 6, which are drawing to a close on Thursday, have highlighted the
violence that was unleashed that day and the extent to which the insurrection
was co-ordinated by extremist militia groups.
Against
this backdrop, the study uncovers disturbing signs of seething discontent and
deep unease just beneath the surface of US society. More than two-thirds of the
respondents said that they feared that the country was facing “a serious threat
to democracy”.
Remarkably,
just over half of the sample group – 50.1% – agreed with the contention that in
the next few years the US would confront another civil war.
With such
jitters at record levels, the survey findings point to areas of confusion
within the US public realm. A robust 89% of respondents think it is very or
extremely important that the US remains a democracy.
Yet the
survey also recorded a seemingly contradictory result – 42% agreed that “having
a strong leader for America is more important than having a democracy”.
The
apparent contradiction between commitment to democracy and devotion to a strong
leader is perhaps partly explained by the prevalence of baseless conspiracy
theories and misinformation. More than one in five people surveyed subscribe to
the QAnon fantasy that US institutions are “controlled by a group of
Satan-worshipping pedophiles”.
Almost a
third signed up to the dystopian vision, also propagated by QAnon, that “a
storm is coming soon” to America that will “sweep away the elites in power and
restore the rightful leaders”.
Nearly a
third endorsed the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from
Donald Trump.
Another
prominent influence on public views is the “great replacement theory” – the
notion that traditional white American society is being supplanted by
immigrants of color. The falsehood was invoked by the shooter who killed 10
people at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, in May and is a regular talking
point of the primetime Fox News host Tucker Carlson.
Some 41% of
the UC Davis poll agreed with the idea that “in America, native-born white
people are being replaced by immigrants”. A similar proportion believe that
“our American way of life is disappearing so fast that we may have to use force
to save it”.
At its most
extreme, a substantial minority chillingly expressed willingness to carry out
specific acts of violence in the pursuit of their political objectives. More
than 12% said they would be willing to “threaten or intimidate a person”, and
10% to “injure a person”.
.webp)
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