Science Study Shows Exceptionally Lonely People Gravitate Toward The Far Right, Trumpism & QAnon

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Study Shows Exceptionally Lonely People Gravitate Toward The Far Right, Trumpism & QAnon​

Alice Kelly
07/20/2021
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Reporters and researchers who have studied Trump supporters, QAnon conspiracy theorists and the far-right have concluded that loneliness may be at the root of America’s conservative extremism.

The theory comes from the frontlines of Trump’s campaign trail and the far corners of right-wing social media, all of which exhibit a deep lack of social connection that has divided our society.

Why do people who are more socially disconnected grativate toward Trump and the far-right?​

A September 2020 poll revealed that 1 in 5 Americans report having no one in their core social network, with a follow-up article stating that these socially disconnected voters were "far more likely to view Trump positively and support his reelection than those with more robust personal networks."

By contrast, Biden was seem as more favorable among people with larger social groups.

Trumpism thrives on social isolation.​

This research aligns with observations from Michael C. Bender, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal who documented Trump’s campaign trail.

In a piece for The Washington Post, Bender wrote that Trump’s "most hardcore rallygoers" at a June 2019 Trump re-election event he attended in central Florida were “mostly older White men and women who lived paycheck to paycheck with plenty of time on their hands — retired or close to it, estranged from their families or otherwise without children — and Trump had, in a surprising way, made their lives richer.”
RELATED: Donald Trump Will Likely Run For President Again In 2024 — But Can He Win Without Social Media?

The pandemic may have increased the political impact of loneliness.​

Social media and modern culture had already made us a somewhat lonely society before the pandemic even began, but the mandated isolation that came with rising Covid case numbers didn’t do much to slow the far-right.

With most of us pushed out of our social circles and further into the depths of the internet, far-right conspiracy theories, like QAnon, thrived during the pandemic.

The subreddit r/qanoncasualties — on which people share stories of family members who have been swept up by the theory — had fewer than 3,500 members at the beginning of June 2020. By October, it had more than 28,000, and as of today, there 167,000 members in total.

The controversial movement even spread its way to Europe in the midst of the pandemic, finding new roots in other socially disconnected countries.

Life and relationship coach Keya Murthytells us that a lonely person is vulnerable to these kinds of movements.

“Such a person goes looking for purpose, meaning, friendships, and something to keep themselves going. Conspiracy theories and far-right movements feed lonely people with a sense of why nothing works in their favor,” Murthy says.

“They were looking for reasons as to why they were unhappy and lonely and conspiracy theories fill in the gaps for them.”

The paradox of the pandemic was that we were pushed apart just as we needed to work together, leaving lonely people searching for meaning and order in new places.

RELATED: New Study Shows That People Who Believe QAnon Are 49% More Mentally Ill Than The Rest Of Us

Why loneliness pushes some people to the far right.​

Loneliness has long been considered a precursor for extreme ideologies that exist on the far left in some capacity as well.

Hannah Arendt, who wrote “The Origins of Totalitarianism” in 1951, said that totalitarianism “bases itself on loneliness, on the experience of not belonging to the world at all, which is among the most radical and desperate experiences of man.”

It is from this mental state that Trump and other far-right leaders have been able to breed extremism by using the language of love and playing on their isolation.

“Their subconscious mind runs one tape ‘people in power are against us, are evil and need to be confronted.’” Murthy says, “They believe that they are not being told the truth and so create their own truth.”

After his supporters had done his dirty work at the January 6 Capitol Insurrection, Trump told his supporters, “We love you.”

The language makes these people feel part of something, it makes them heard and seen.

RELATED: How Donald Trump Became America's Toxic Ex-Boyfriend

Alice Kelly is a writer living in Brooklyn, New York. Catch her covering all things social justice, news, and entertainment. Keep up with her Twitter for more.
 
Shocking study shows people who feel they are wronged by society gravitate towards extremist (But only right wing extremism because we define extremist as right wingers now) positions. Now do a similar study on hardcore commies and troons.
 
So if I'm understanding this right, a bunch of socially isolated weirdos a managed to elect this guy president, despite the fact that they're outnumbered 4 to 1? And this is supposed to make him look bad? Make them look bad?

It's just as easy to draw the conclusion that people who are isolated tend to be more independently-minded by necessity so they're actually the gigabrained Chads in this scenario.

Studies are dumb.
 
Shocking study shows people who feel they are wronged by society gravitate towards extremist (But only right wing extremism because we define extremist as right wingers now) positions. Now do a similar study on hardcore commies and troons.
Mental retardation leads to those paths. You don't even need a study for that.
 
R E N T F R E E

Also "Trumpism thrives on social isolation"......... Really? Last I checked Trump rallies were fucking massive, and "right-wingers" tend to include boomers and church folks and gymbros and, ya know, fairly social types. Meanwhile tranny janny libs continue to "socially distance" and most of their friends are terminally online Twitter autists.

This is just projection, as always.
 
You guys are missing the point entirely, it's not saying that all Trump supporters/voters suffer from extreme loneliness but, a few do. Specifically those who subscribe to the more unorthodox and fringe worldview espouse by Q-Anon. You could also make the argument that the right-wing in America tends to be more individualistic and less likely to fall under peer-pressure. So they gravitate towards a man that "embodies" independence and self-sufficiency, a businessman. Also those on the right tend to be less agreeable on average. Less agreeable people have a tendency of being more aggressive and less likely to be social. On the other hand, it would make sense that more "social" people would prefer Biden, since the left-wing here tends to be more collectivist and more agreeable. Agreeable people are more likely to fall in line with the status quo and less likely to question the system,(to avoid offending and risk losing social status/capital) and that's what Biden represents, the status quo.
 
Well you've convinced me, Article Author. I don't want to be lonely anymore, so I'm giving up on Trump and becoming a liberal. Thanks!
 
Is it safe to assume that Alice Kelly treats her pets like they're children?
More like lovers.
Yeah, people who have been pushed away from the left are attracted to the right. Maybe you could suggest a solution instead of publishing yet another article mocking extremists
They're looking to suggest one last solution to that problem.
 
You could also make the argument that the right-wing in America tends to be more individualistic and less likely to fall under peer-pressure.
This is really the truth right here.
Not that I trust conservatives not to turn coat and dump pro-social/pro-public policies at the expense of the individual (see: Post-9/11 & PATRIOT Act); but in general right-wing politics tend to appeal to people who don't need hivemind/groupthink to function.

The left just likes to paint individualism as a bad thing; between portraying it as "lol u have no friends!" or going the CRT/Robin DiAngelo route and claiming its "racist"/"white supremacy" to not be a bugman.
Personally I miss the days when they would at least run the "unrealistic" route...
 
I know by calling it “Trumpism” they’re trying to make it sound like a cult, but it doesn’t really work when you’re talking about a group of people who aren’t really ideologically, morally or spatially united except for the fact that they all voted for the same person 5 years ago.
 
I know by calling it “Trumpism” they’re trying to make it sound like a cult, but it doesn’t really work when you’re talking about a group of people who aren’t really ideologically, morally or spatially united except for the fact that they all voted for the same person 5 years ago.
Well they can't call it nationalism or else people might start getting funny ideas.
 
R E N T F R E E

Also "Trumpism thrives on social isolation"......... Really? Last I checked Trump rallies were fucking massive, and "right-wingers" tend to include boomers and church folks and gymbros and, ya know, fairly social types. Meanwhile tranny janny libs continue to "socially distance" and most of their friends are terminally online Twitter autists.

This is just projection, as always.
Those boat rallies were pretty impressive and a sight to behold.
 
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