rising_then_falling

rising_then_falling t1_iuij4nc wrote

Slide nine of the linked PDF.

One of the suggestions is that belief in conspiracy theories is strongly linked to mistrust of the government. It perhaps makes sense that those who are politically opposed to the current government are more likely to mistrust its 'official version' narrative.

Would be interesting to see if this changes after a change of government next election.

It could also be that those inherently mistrustful of government and officialdom are more likely to be conspiracy theorists.

Certainly, all the slightly loopy types I've met with an interest in contrails/conspiracies/vaccine hoax etc have been the hippy/lefty/druggy types, not the UKIP/little Britain/curtain twitcher type.

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rising_then_falling t1_iuhlha7 wrote

As ever, you have to find the source. The original question in the poll was "In your opinion are the following statements true or false?"

Then various statements rating to terror, cover ups etc. Including "Victims of terror attacks in the UK are not being truthful about what happened to them"

6% said definitely true, another 13% said probably true.

For every statement, about 5% were solid reality deniers.

However, this group. Is significantly skewed towards :

Non voters, people who get their news primarily from social media, and those under 34.

It is slightly skewed towards men and towards Labour voters, who in all cases are more likely to believe the conspiracy theories than Conservative voters.

Original results

https://kcl.ac.uk/policy-institute/assets/truth-under-attack.pdf

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