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| Political Manipulation of Existential Fear |
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| Nation - Politics | |||
| TS-Si News Service | |||
| Thursday, 20 October 2011 09:00 | |||
Washington, DC, USA. Americans were acutely aware of their own deaths after September 11, 2001, which can explain why the approval ratings of President George W. Bush who was perceived as indecisive before the terrorist attacks soared to over 90 percent.That is one lesson from the literature on mortality salience, a psychological mechanism which strengthens the connections people have with their in-group as a defense mechanism against the awareness of eventual death. Psychologists Florette Cohen at the College of Staten Island (CSI, a senior college of The City University of New York), and Sheldon Solomon of Skidmore College published a review of the relevant fields in a new article that appears in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science. Cohen and Solomon say the fear people felt after 9/11 was real, but it also made them ripe for psychological manipulation. "We all know that fear tactics have been used by politicians for years to sway votes," says Cohen. Now psychological research offers insight into the broader subject of terror management. The authors cite studies showing that awareness of mortality tends to make people feel more positive toward heroic, charismatic figures and more punitive toward wrongdoers. In one study, Cohen and her colleagues asked participants to think of death and then gave them statements from three fictional political figures.
After thinking about death, support for the charismatic leader shot up eightfold. Even subliminal suggestions of mortality have similar effects.
Awareness of danger and death can bias even peaceful people toward war or aggression.
As time goes by and the memory of danger and death grows fainter, however, morality salience tends to polarize people politically, leading them to cling to their own beliefs and demonize others who hold opposing beliefs seeing in them the cause of their own endangerment. The psychological research should make voters wary of emotional political appeals and even of their own emotions in response, Cohen says. "We encourage all citizens to vote with their heads rather than their hearts. Become an educated voter. Look at the candidate's positions and platforms. Look at who you are voting for and what they stand for." CitationThe Politics of Mortal Terror. Florette Cohen and Sheldon Solomon. Current Directions in Psychological Science 2011; 20: 316-320. doi:10.1177/0963721411416570
Abstract Terror-management theory is used to examine how political preferences are altered when existential concerns are aroused. The theory posits that the uniquely human awareness of death engenders potentially debilitating terror that is managed through devotion to cultural worldviews that give individuals a sense that life has meaning and that they have value. Research shows that mortality salience increases adherence to cherished cultural values and instigates efforts to bolster self-esteem. Here we review research documenting the role of terror-management processes in promoting support for charismatic leaders who share one’s cherished beliefs and aggression against those who hold rival beliefs. Implications for fostering effective participatory democracy are considered. Keywords: death, election, leadership, terror-management theory, voting behaviors.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 19 October 2011 21:12 |



Washington, DC, USA. Americans were acutely aware of their own deaths after September 11, 2001, which can explain why the approval ratings of President George W. Bush who was perceived as indecisive before the terrorist attacks soared to over 90 percent.
The authors cite studies showing that awareness of mortality tends to make people feel more positive toward heroic, charismatic figures and more punitive toward wrongdoers. In one study, Cohen and her colleagues asked participants to think of death and then gave them statements from three fictional political figures.
theory
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