I'm not sure whose logic you're not following. But from earlier postings, I believe Nort has an idea that <insert right-wing fixations A, B, C> destroyed people's trust in mainstream institutions, therefore they turn to alternative sources.Ares Land wrote: ↑Wed Sep 22, 2021 4:08 amI know at heart opposition to vaccines is an issue of trust in the institutions. But I don't fully understand the logic.zompist wrote: ↑Wed Sep 22, 2021 12:02 am I don't think there's been any magical time, at least in the last 150 years, when everyone in the country accepted some institution as completely trustworthy. Being angry at the newspapers, or TV, or academics, or the health authorities, is an age-old American pastime.
And one reason is that it's enormously profitable to spread disinformation.
I don't trust my government much myself. I'm suspicious of health authorities, newspapers and TV.
Even so, vaccines are a logical answer to a viral pandemic. We know antiviral drugs have always been a difficult proposition, and that miracle cures aren't likely to work. I followed the HCQ trials with some interest, and I think given the circumstances giving it a shot was reasonable, but it was soon pretty obvious that it was snake oil.
The thing is, his list of fixations is absurdly recent. Everyone has had some institution fail them— that's how modernity works. And the period just before modernity, which rather notoriously lost confidence first in the Popes, and then in kings.
Religiously, some people were disgusted to find that the church was a reactionary support for the oppressors; others were disgusted by academics and even church leaders abandoning what they considered divine teaching and practice. In American politics, everyone has some key events where it turned out the government was lying or misbehaving. Anyone who thinks this is new should review the actual controversies of the 1930s, the '50s, the '60s. Or the 1850s for that matter.
It's true that things like vaccinations for polio and the flu were not very controversial a generation ago. But crazy conspiracy theories aren't new either— 1960s conservatives railed against fluoridation of drinking water, and you could probably fill a book with things that have been claimed to be the mark of the beast.
The Covid pandemic has some strong parallels to the 1919 influenza one— especially in the rush to "re-open" which led to huge surges in cases.
You can certainly find evidence that e.g. trust in the US government has declined. Explaining that is another story. If you look at Pew's very interesting chart, the first thing I'd point out is that the trust level correlates strongly with economic prosperity: the postwar boom, the Clinton-era boom. Political polarization is also far higher today— but the chart is highly distorting since polling on this question only began in 1958. The big political question isn't "why is US politics so polarized today" but "why was it unusually unpolarized in the postwar era". And there are some obvious reasons for that.
Probably linked to polarization: we had highly partisan newspapers for most of our history, then a period of centrist monopoly by the top 3 TV networks, and now a competing set of highly partisan news networks. There's no huge mystery why right-wingers believe things that outsiders consider weird or wrong: they're fed a constant stream of those things from radio, TV, and churches. And those things are big, big business which isn't going to change its model soon.