young voters say social media to blame for divisions in the u.s - eviltoast

A Quinnipiac University poll asked U.S. registered voters to select one of four options to blame for the divisions in the country. Overall, 35 percent blamed social media, 32 percent blamed political leaders, 28 percent blamed cable news channels and only 1 percent blamed other countries.

    • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There’s some research to back it up. Social media has made it extremely easy for bad actors to run effective disinformation campaigns with very little effort on their part.

      • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        That and platforms that passively protect them while actively suppressing anyone calling them out, which is to say, all of them.

      • reddig33@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This shit’s been going on since the civil war. There was no Facebook in the 60s but somehow JFK, RFK, MLK were all assassinated. This is nothing new. Social media just brings it into the daylight.

          • rob299@bookwormstory.socialOP
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            1 year ago

            I think they might had meant that people had been divided since before social media. To me it just seems they were keeping to the main topic of the post. So maybe they were debating that statement.

            • reddig33@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              The headline says that young people blame social media for divisions in the US. I am pointing out that these divisions have always been here since before social media and that the “young people” point of view (which I doubt is an accurate portrayal) is naive. Phyllis Schlafely used to send out southern strategy-centered newsletters in the 70s for example.

              • Beej Jorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org
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                1 year ago

                I agree with you, but there is a greater subtext here that social media has made it easier than ever to make money by driving a wedge harder than ever into that split. Same split, but this makes the old tactics look pretty quaint. IMHO.

    • Kalkaline @leminal.space
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      1 year ago

      Seems like one side wants to feed and educate kids on tax payer dollars while the other one wants to install a dictatorship.

    • rob299@bookwormstory.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Maybe. Although the hill is a center leaning news site ranked by allsidesm not necessarily right leaning, although it wouldn’t hurt to look into the leanings of the university that did the actual survey.

      It seems that some of the choices offered were pretty limited, seemed government was limited to it as government at a whole not specific sides of the government. That may had confused them even more and made them to beleive it was social media more than the government, and possibly why less people picked that choice. That or they liked what the government is currently doing and didn’t want to pick that choice because of how simplified the choice was.

    • 5BC2E7@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      unfortunately too many people use that label for anyone that doesn’t agree with their opinions. it’s unfortunate because fascism is a real concern so we should not dillute the term.

      • dom@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Part of the problem is a lot of people are indirectly supporting it by being single issue voters and “putting up with” the stuff they don’t like in order to support the one cause they care about.

      • rob299@bookwormstory.socialOP
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        1 year ago

        dispite common believe, you still have choices for news. however you can’t just sort them by the names outright anymore but by either who owns them, or which corperation owns them.

        • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          I wasn’t insinuating otherwise, I was mostly just joking because they said “seems like it might be the fascists” and I was simply pointing out, yes, yes it is. The fascists who own news media companies, which thankfully isn’t all of the media. Quite a lot of it though, sadly.

          • rob299@bookwormstory.socialOP
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            1 year ago

            ah, makes sense now. I must had misunderstood the context. I do hear people all the time complaining about who owns the media and etc. So I was responding how I did by instinct. Yes we do need other voices in the news besides just them.

    • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Liberals would rather blame anything than take responsibility for their part in legitimizing and platforming fascist rhetoric.

    • rob299@bookwormstory.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      To an extent, yes. I believe tho that social media enables the potential spread of dividing people. Do I personally think social media is the number one reason, no.

  • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I don’t know (…or care, really) about USA so I’ll speak on more general grounds.

    There’s a lot of stuff in social media that makes it a great soapbox for social manipulation:

    • low cost, wide reaching: it’s easy to be heard
    • decontextualisation: it gives more room for assumers¹ to do their shit, and make an incorrect context out of nowhere.
    • virality: it’s easy to start a witch hunt. Cue to the pitchfork emporium / Twitter MC of the day.
    • upvote/like-based systems: people don’t upvote your content (increasing its visibility) because you’re right, they do it because you say it confidently.
    • on the Internet, nobody knows that you’re a dog: concern trolling made easy.

    Now look at what @startle@toast.ooo said: “Dunno man, seems like it might be the fascists.”. IMO that user is being spot on, those five things make social media specially easy to manipulate for fascists². And they’re mostly the ones creating this dichotomisation of society³, because that’s how they’re able to congregate the nutjobs into a political discourse. Suddenly the village idiot doesn’t simply say “they’re hiding aliens from us” (stupid, but morally OK), the discourse becomes “the Jews are hiding aliens from us” (stupid and Antisemitic).

    1. By “assumers” I mean individuals who are quick to draw conclusions based on little to no reasoning, evidence, or thought. This plague exists since the dawn of time, it’s just that decontextualisation gives them more room to assume shit out of nowhere.
    2. Fascists often babble about “virtue signalling”, without realising that themselves are prone to signal adherence to their stupid beliefs. They don’t want to be in the receiving end of their own witch hunts.
    3. By “society” I mean at the very least Western Europe plus the Americas; probably more. It is not exclusive to USA.
    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      To expand more on virality: Platform algorithms reward posts that get engagement because it sells ad space. Posts that trigger our lizard brain get engagement.

    • rob299@bookwormstory.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      The people using it also make up social media. without the people social media is worthless, and powerless. and the more powerless in particular that it is the less divisions it would be able to cause, if that real is the legit cause of dividing people. It might or might not be the main cause but sure we could agree that it enables the spread of divising tactics.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A plurality of young voters say they hold social media responsible for divisions among Americans, according to a survey released Monday.

    A Quinnipiac University poll asked U.S. registered voters to select one of four options to blame for the divisions in the country.

    “When it comes to the source of the angry white noise of discord and division, the segment of the population most connected to it is the age group most critical of it,” Quinnipiac polling analyst Tim Malloy said in a press release of the poll.

    Public officials have struggled to regulate social media, despite known consequences of its use.

    A bipartisan coalition of 33 attorneys general recently filed lawsuits against Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, accusing the company of knowingly designing features that harm young users’ mental health.

    The poll surveyed 1,574 self-identified registered voters nationwide from Nov. 9-13, and it has a margin of error of 2.5 percentage points.


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