This article presents helpful insights toward our national healing! I pray we 
do...

https://time.com/5904504/political-ideology-division/?linkId=103558682
'We've Built the Most Toxic Marriage Ever': Why Political Opposites in the U.S. 
Despise Each Other


BY BELINDA LUSCOMBE  <https://time.com/author/belinda-luscombe/> 
<https://twitter.com/luscombeland> OCTOBER 29, 2020 3:17 PM EDT
Americans clearly do not agree about the best solutions to the country’s 
biggest problems. But while those disagreements are fierce, they are not as 
strong as their feelings of distrust, dislike and disdain for people who belong 
to the opposing political party. In fact, Democrats and Republicans have 
developed such harsh antipathy for their political opposites that it exceeds 
the level of camaraderie they feel for those who vote the same way. It is these 
personal antipathies more than differing political beliefs that are driving 
Americans’ divisions.

These are the findings from a new report 
<https://science.sciencemag.org/cgi/doi/10.1126/science.abe1715> by a group of 
social scientists from 11 universities and six different disciplines—political 
science, psychology, sociology, economics, management and computational social 
science—who did a review of the literature from each of their areas of 
expertise to see what the social sciences had to say about America’s current 
political divisions. The study, which was published on Oct. 29 in Science, was 
co-led by Northwestern University professor of social psychology Eli Finkel, 
whose area of expertise is actually marriage and interpersonal relationships.

For the first time, say the researchers, people’s animosity toward their 
political opponents exceeds their attachment to those who lean the same way. 
Finkel and his colleagues point to the American National Election Survey 
<https://electionstudies.org/>, which has been tallying the attitudes of voters 
since the ’70s and has found that Americans’ level of warmth for their own 
party has remained level; they have not become more loyal to or fonder of those 
who share their ideology. But especially since 2012, their feelings for the 
other party have become so cold that it is a more potent force than their party 
fidelity. A 2020 NBER <https://ideas.repec.org/p/nbr/nberwo/26669.html> study 
of nine Western democracies found the U.S. had the highest rate of polarization 
<https://time.com/5887428/american-political-division/> of any of them between 
the people in opposing political parties.

Adherents to one party increasingly see those who vote the other way as not 
just different but less moral, less trustworthy and unrecognizable to them.. 
It’s the combination of the three that makes the divisions so sharp. “It’s not 
just they are in a different group,” says Finkel. “They’re alien from me, 
they’re highly unlikeable and they’re doing immoral things. That creates the 
sectarian disaster.”

Of course, many of these impressions are not based in fact. In 2015, 
researchers <https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/697253> asked 
1,000 respondents on YouGov how many Republicans made more than $250,000 a 
year.. The average guess was 38%. (It was 2%.) The survey takers also estimated 
that almost a third of Democrats were LGBT. (About 6% are.) The impressions 
were more inaccurate when respondents were guessing about the party they didn’t 
belong to than when they were guessing about the one they did..

According to the Science study, these personal antipathies have been driven by 
three trends. One is the rise of partisan media and social media, which enables 
people to live in information and opinion bubbles, and makes those with 
opposing views seem more abnormal. Another is the tendency of political 
operatives and elites to identify and emphasize cudgel issues, such as abortion 
or LGBTQ rights, to make the adherents of other parties seem less humane and on 
the side of evil, in order to generate votes and for fundraising. “It’s 
strategically valuable for political elites to find a way to drum up hatred for 
the opposition,” says Finkel.

The final trend is the rise of the “mega-identity” in which other personality 
traits and beliefs are brought in line with a political identity. “For the 
first time in American history, immigrants, African Americans and other 
marginalized communities, LGBT all align with one political orientation,” says 
Finkel. “This is one of the major elements of othering. This highly 
multicultural party is a little difficult for some people who for several 
generations have lived in the same rural community, and are European-American. 
They find them increasingly odd and different. At the same time people in the 
multicultural party feel like, Well, you guys are not what America is now. You 
also are weird and incomprehensible and an anachronism.” This “mega-identity” 
works like a religion, in which adherents to a set of beliefs have strict rules 
for inclusion and regard those who only abide by some of the rules as 
apostates. The researchers call this phenomenon “political sectarianism.”

The paper offers several avenues of exploration for ways of dissolving these 
divisions. Reinstating the FCC’s “fairness doctrine,” which required 
broadcasters to be unbiased but was overturned in 1987, seems unlikely, but 
several studies 
<https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0956797620939054> have found 
that nudging people to think about accuracy before sharing a post on social 
media reduced the spread of inflammatory information. Campaign finance reform, 
the reduction of gerrymandering and encouraging politicians to treat their 
opponents with warmth might militate against candidates always using extreme 
positions to get elected. The 2015 YouGov experiment and others 
<https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/Group%20Metaperception%20Preprint_8cc41214-29a4-43c3-81eb-a1f63d0eee44.pdf>
 have shown that when people are informed of the inaccuracy of their 
stereotypes, their opinions soften.

None of it is simple. Finkel, who’s better known as the author of The 
All-or-Nothing Marriage 
<https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1101984341/ref=as_li_qf_asin_il_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=time037-20&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=1101984341&linkId=3725bbc6c771a3afbad171650b087b41>
 than as a political analyst, says he couldn’t help noticing how similar 
conditions in the U.S. were to those of divorcing couples. “If you were to set 
yourself the diabolical task of how to build the most toxic marriage possible, 
you would maximize contempt, you would make sure you interpreted your partner’s 
actions in the most negative way, you would surround yourself with people who 
hate your spouse,” he says. “If you superimpose those characteristics on the 
body politic, we’ve built the most toxic marriage possible.” But considering 
that the divisions and mistrust and deep personal antipathy leave the U.S.. 
open to manipulation by outsiders and prevent a unified approach to common 
problems like climate change 
<https://time.com/5864692/climate-change-defining-moment/> and the pandemic 
<https://time.com/5887432/coronavirus-united-states-failure/>, it seems like it 
might be worth the cost of therapy.

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