It’s snowing & freezing in NYC. What the hell ever happened to global warming?
Cherry picking
Cherry picking paints a misleading picture by selecting a few facts that support an idea and ignoring the larger body of evidence. Trump cherry picks isolated examples of Hispanic supporters to cover the fact that the vast majority of surveyed Hispanics disapprove of him .
Conspiracy theories
Conspiracy theories are a common feature of science denial. Deniers claim that the large group of people who disagree with them are part of a conspiracy. Trump often uses this logic to justify why the media speaks poorly about him.
Both climate science denialists and Trump are known to entertain a variety of conspiracy theories. For example, Trump has been a big proponent of the birther theory about Obama’s birthplace ).
An example of Trump inoculation
Now that we understand the techniques Trump uses to spread information, let’s look at an example of inoculation using the fact-myth-fallacy approach used by inoculation theory:
Donald Trump is highly unpopular among Hispanics. This should come as no surprise given his constant refrain for a wall along the Mexican border, as well as his characterisation that Mexicans crossing the border are drug traffickers and rapists.
A recent Gallup survey found 77% of Hispanics view Trump unfavourably. This is the highest disapproval rating among all presidential candidates.
Contradicting these statistics, Trump falsely claims that Latinos love him . At one rally, Trump brought an enthusiastic Colombian woman on stage to share her support .
Trump uses the cherry picking technique to distort the facts. He paints a misleading picture by highlighting a single example and ignoring contradicting information.
This inoculation approach gives people the critical thinking skills to assess arguments and determine what information to believe.
Is this the solution to stop Trump?
Given similarities between science denial and Trump support, could we apply inoculation theory to stop Trump? It’s difficult to say.
Inoculation research has mainly been applied to areas of knowledge that are quite different to the complicated political arena. Trump’s support is not as simple as distinguishing between a fact and a myth.
When it comes to voting patterns, political affiliations interact with ideology, religion and many other factors, including dissatisfaction with the political establishment – a dominant theme in this election cycle.
Promisingly, inoculation has been found to be effective in neutralising political attack messages . But whether inoculation would prevent Trump’s influence from spreading beyond his core followers is an unanswered question.
Even if examining Trump’s arguments using the inoculation approach has a minimal effect on the political landscape, at least Trump’s candidacy can help strengthen our critical thinking skills.
This article originally appeared on The Conversation
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/mar/25/donald-trump-movement-pyschology-facts?utm_source=esp&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=GU+Today+USA+-+Version+CB+header&utm_term=163994&subid=14230036&CMP=ema_565
An interesting study of not Donald Trump as a Presidential candidate necessarily, But how a person like him is able to use techniques to sway people, to exploit otherwise rational and normal people when they know that they are obviously being lied to. Also, to ignore the things they abhor about Donald Trump, such as his racism, bigotry, misogyny and anti-Semanticism, yet still be able to set those things aside and support him not because he is a racist, misogynist, bigot and anti-Semite (because many of them are not), and completely ignorant of the duties of the office, but in spite of it. It shows the tricks used to get people to blind themselves to the overwhelming bad and interesting downright evil or ignorant parts of him and his candidacy, yet support him anyway.
He is a gift to Psychiatrists and Psychologists as a case study that they have not seen since the days of Mussolini and Hitler of obviously lying to people, yet having those people excuse those lies and racism and bigotry and hate and misogyny and sexism and ignorance because the figure telling them comes across as a strong person. A person like Trump comes along only once in several generations and he deserves serious study. Not any office of power, but study.
Trump is not as much a Presidential candidate, as he is a disease.