Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Americans Say Political Correctness Have Made Them Keep Their Point Of Views And Opinions To Themselves



CATO At Liberty: Poll: 71% of Americans Say Political Correctness Has Silenced Discussions Society Needs to Have, 58% Have Political Views They’re Afraid to Share

The Cato 2017 Free Speech and Tolerance Survey, a new national poll of 2,300 U.S. adults, finds that 71% Americans believe that political correctness has silenced important discussions our society needs to have. The consequences are personal—58% of Americans believe the political climate prevents them from sharing their own political beliefs.

Democrats are unique, however, in that a slim majority (53%) do not feel the need to self-censor. Conversely, strong majorities of Republicans (73%) and independents (58%) say they keep some political beliefs to themselves.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: One only needs to look at the U.S. Presidential election last year, and remember how  the entire political pundit class and the main stream media believed in the polls that Hillary Clinton would win by a massive landslide .... a point of view that was further confirmed within their own echo chamber where everyone was saying the same thing while the few dissenting points of view were laughed at and ignored. So hence the shock among the media and the political elites that their view of the world was not shared by many Americans, and even more bewilderment that so many of these "deplorables" kept their views to themselves. As to the above CATO poll .... I am willing to bet that the 58% who are afraid to share their views are mostly conservatives .... and I am also willing to bet that this number is not factored into how polls are being done today. To put it bluntly .... President Trump's support is probably 15% - 20% higher than what the polls are saying today.

The U.S. is also not the only country that is experiencing this phenomenon of having a significant percentage of it's population keeping their point of view to themselves. The landslide  re-election of Japanese Prime Minister Abe two weeks shocked many because the polls revealed him to be the most unpopular political leader in Japan in years .... so how did he and his coalition partners get 65% of the vote? He won for the same reasons on why President Trump won his election. Japanese Prime Minister Abe's views on the military/foreign policy/government budgets/etc. are despised by many in the media and the political pundit class, and this criticism refrains many within the public to admit that they agree with his views. But come election time .... as we witnessed in both the U.S. and Japan .... they made their point crystal clear .... and this is turn has driven many (primarily in the media) stir crazy.

Update: I should also add this little interesting fact on people keeping their views private.  For every comment made on this blog, I get about 7 or 8 emails on that topic .... and even I am surprised on who those people sometimes are, but they want their views private (which of course I will always respect).

2 comments:

jac said...

Left wing has lost the cold war and they want a revenge. The infiltration of media by the left is obvious in most of the West. The rage is higher and higher, but that's difficult to change the mind of people in democracy.

Anonymous said...

That's why I love watching real time with bill maher hehe he is so politically incorrect he got kicked off his own show, ironically labelled "politically incorrect" back then.

But in all seriousness, this is an issue in the US, and while I really like Bill, he perfectly fits that study in that he does not supress but ridicule the right/republican side and other groups (like religion) and you can see that his republican guests who come on the show are often booed/ridiculed. While he and the audience (who are mainly Democrats/liberals) are often technically right in doing so, it's never helpful to ridicule the other side. It just leads to isolation and radicalisation. Often people choose a side not entirely based on rationale decisionmaking but based on what they desire, want, like.

Anyways. ..good study find @wnu and very current