• mettwurstkaninchen@feddit.org
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    14 days ago

    Additionally, the researchers found that life dissatisfaction indirectly influenced right-wing populist voting through two key attitudes: political distrust and anti-immigration sentiment. Dissatisfied individuals were more likely to distrust political institutions and view immigration negatively, which in turn increased their likelihood of voting for right-wing populist parties. Notably, anti-immigration sentiment emerged as the stronger of the two mediators.

    And this is the key point of right-wing propaganda. Destroy trust into organizations, sow sentiments against immigrants, spread fear by overhyping individual crimes, produce anxiety. Basically “make people angry and fearful”.

    • P1r4nha@feddit.de
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      14 days ago

      Yeah, duh: making immigrants and politicians the scapegoat works best when people are unhappy with life.

      To me it’s extremely transparent however that neoliberals and conservatives have defunded and weakened our institutions so they can no longer fulfill their responsibilities. This leads to dissatisfaction which the extreme right blames on immigrants and correctly on neoliberal politicians.

      That this leads to women voting for patriarchs, Jewish people for descendants of Nazis and second generation immigrants for racists, is so frustrating.

    • Schmerzbold@feddit.org
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      13 days ago

      And since the media - especially social media - is trapped in an attention economy where mainly bad news drive engagement it’s no wonder people have a skewed and negative view of reality.

    • kaffiene@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      Yup fear uncertainty and doubt has underpinned conservative messaging forever. The outgroup are after your stuff, watch out!

    • sunzu@kbin.run
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      13 days ago

      anti-immigration sentiment.

      I wonder why indiginous wage slaves would feel this way… Like there is no way to tell why they would feel like this.

      CBO estimated that net immigration was 2.67 million immigrants in 2022, and 3.3 million immigrants in 2023, the highest in its data going back to 2000, and about triple the average rate between 2000 and 2021 (1.05 million immigrants per year).

      I wonder what happened in 2022 that made daddy bringing all these additional slaves.

      • yeahiknow3@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        13 days ago

        Immigrants don’t need to be “brought.” This is right-wing rhetoric, but most ironic of all is that these “wage slaves” are literally better off with more immigration, not less.