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In reply to the discussion: Trump "won" - Election fraud - time for it to be exposed [View all]Ponietz
(4,226 posts)54. Why do people cling to insidious conspiracy theories?
https://phys.org/news/2025-04-people-conspiracy-theories-subconscious-quest.html
While all people are innately driven to find meaning in their lives, this subconscious desire pulls some people to conspiracy theories and dangerous belief systems.
After an extensive review of psychological research, renowned social psychologist Arie Kruglanski and journalist Dan Raviv show how people's need for 'significance' propels our actions, governs our feelings, and dominates our thoughts in their new book "The Quest for Significance".
"Experts on human motivation contend that all people share the same set of basic needs, and everything people do, try to attain, or avoid is in the service of satisfying one or more of those basic needs," they explain.
"The need for significance and mattering is one such preeminent basic need that all people have."
Drawing on both academic, peer-reviewed research and the personal experiences of the authors, including Kruglanski's childhood in Poland during the Holocaust, the authors explore how this need for meaning can motivate people towards harmful and even violent actsincluding believing conspiracy theories. They also suggest that self-awareness is key to how people can avoid becoming susceptible.
The authors spotlight factors that make modern society "fraught with uncertainty," from financial chaos to the Ukraine war, the rise of authoritarians, and global health crises.
While all people are innately driven to find meaning in their lives, this subconscious desire pulls some people to conspiracy theories and dangerous belief systems.
After an extensive review of psychological research, renowned social psychologist Arie Kruglanski and journalist Dan Raviv show how people's need for 'significance' propels our actions, governs our feelings, and dominates our thoughts in their new book "The Quest for Significance".
"Experts on human motivation contend that all people share the same set of basic needs, and everything people do, try to attain, or avoid is in the service of satisfying one or more of those basic needs," they explain.
"The need for significance and mattering is one such preeminent basic need that all people have."
Drawing on both academic, peer-reviewed research and the personal experiences of the authors, including Kruglanski's childhood in Poland during the Holocaust, the authors explore how this need for meaning can motivate people towards harmful and even violent actsincluding believing conspiracy theories. They also suggest that self-awareness is key to how people can avoid becoming susceptible.
The authors spotlight factors that make modern society "fraught with uncertainty," from financial chaos to the Ukraine war, the rise of authoritarians, and global health crises.
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Ballots are counted precinct by precinct, it's not like anyone is running all 8 million ballots through the same scanner
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#41
We have mail in voting so most ballots are collected at the elections division or at drop off bins, & then transferred.
CrispyQ
Jun 2025
#46
So , to be clear, you don't believe in hand counting under any circumstance?
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#48
No. What I said is I don't believe we're ever going back to hand counted ballots. We're just not.
CrispyQ
Jun 2025
#49
I could understand errors if we were counting 50 races in precincts with thousands of voters
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#84
If you would read the information they have already presented tons of evidence
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#29
Nope, it is exactly the same. They had only grifters and conspiracy theory nut jobs.
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#14
Is that actually even true? Has Elias really moved his position from the below? That would be news.
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#23
Sidney Powell or any other Trump grifter could have delivered that exact same post word-for-word
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#55
You don't debate in good faith, you don't address any points I make
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#57
I don't debate the finer points of 9/11 trutherism or QAnon stuff either. This is the same type of nonsense
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#58
lol, a complete non-sequitur. Franken has absolutely nothing to do with this discussion.
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#62
Ummm the machine count said he lost, he filed for a handcount and won
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#63
The difference is now, for example Wisconsin does not require hand counting even for a recount
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#66
So were Governor Evers and AG Kaul (both Democrats), just ignorant that an election was stolen out from under them?
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#67
Idk but if I was going to guess I would say they are afraid of people like you who think transparency is unimportant
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#69
So you are positing that they "know" the election was stolen but are scared to do or say anything?
tritsofme
Jun 2025
#70
Actually in 2020 when Georgia was hand counted thousands of votes were found
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#39
We heard him whine and holler and scream about 2020, and disclose every possible way Trump thought the election
lees1975
Jun 2025
#27
I don't understand how you get to call us "incels and losers" without getting a hide
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#42
I believe the Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth was hand-picked by Governor Josh Shapiro
Ponietz
Jun 2025
#60
I believe letting insiders with computer access decide our elections
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#61
I believe the American people have the right to oversee the counting of their votes
questionseverything
Jun 2025
#77
I found it interesting that Musk wanted to use his SpaceX satellites as air traffic controllers....
kentuck
Jun 2025
#33
Part of the reason they came so hard with the "stolen election" bullshit after '20 is so we'd have to refute hard.
BlueTsunami2018
Jun 2025
#90