Educational background also played a role. Far-right views were more prevalent among respondents with a high school diploma or less at 24 percent, compared to 19 percent of those with a college degree.

  • atmorous@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I’m going to say something huge.

    We are a social species.

    If people are raised, or live in isolation they are far more susceptible to bad ideas/ways of thinking/ideologies, & severe mental health issues. (I would know I’ve lived my own version of COVID for 23 years)

    Many rural people can live decades without seeing other vastly different people from them. Espefially if they stay in their home or town without genuinely interacting with people different from them

    All this, mixed with boredom of nothing to do in rural, breeding racism overtime, & giving a “rural family” feel to MAGA united them overtime but in worst ways possible

    For ones that can be changed they need to be befriended by other white people and shown the truth then gradually introduced to better ways of thinking, and other people

    Its a tragedy the country left so many people behind over all these decades. They would have been a lot different if no one was left behind

    For the world I don’t know how bad it is but hopefully not as bad as our situation

    • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      The balance between spending time with your elderly to keep them from going bad and going full non contact with them because they’re dragging you down is crazy making

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        13 hours ago

        Which may highlight the the issue with correlation and causation in this study. Are they far right because of having less social interaction, or does being far right tend to push people in your life away?