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The Educated Aren’t Immune From Absurd Conspiracy Theories

February 25, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

Smart human beings, even highly educated ones, do things that don’t make logical sense all the time. (Jack Lawrence)
Smart human beings, even highly educated ones, do things that don’t make logical sense all the time. (Jack Lawrence)

By Jill Richardson

Conspiracy theories like QAnon are outlandish, dangerous, and often absurd. So why do people believe them?




Some say it’s a lack of education. “They can do QAnon, or they can do college-educated voters,” Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY) said about Republicans. “They cannot do both.”

I disagree. As Osita Nwanevu argued recently, the belief that QAnon’s followers are uneducated “is based in classism, not reality.”

Nwanevu presents evidence that education has little to do with whether one believes in QAnon conspiracies. And he points out that many of those arrested at the Capitol riot were business owners, lawyers, accountants, or other white collar professionals. “There were plenty of graduates and good students in the mob that day,” he wrote for The New Republic.

In the U.S., higher education is tied more to your parents’ income than your brains. Intelligence and work ethic play a role, of course, but the roadblocks between people in low-income families and a college degree are well-documented.

Take my school for example.

This school year at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, students from the poorest 50 percent of Wisconsin families made up only about 20 percent of the freshman class.

The school covers full tuition for these low-income students, which is commendable. But in a world where your parents’ income didn’t affect your shot at a college education, students from the poorest half of the state would account for, well, half of the freshman class.




Then look at Donald Trump. He paid someone to take his SATs, called in a favor in the Wharton admissions office, and apparently had a lackluster record while at the school. Then he speculated on TV about the benefits of injecting bleach into the human body and became the country’s leading election conspiracy theorist.

We want to believe we live in a meritocracy because, for the well off, it feels fairer to have so much while others have little if we earned it. For the poor, belief in a meritocracy means believing you have the power to pull yourself out of poverty if you just work hard enough.

However, the data shows that it’s an illusion: the people born at the top tend to stay at the top, and people born at the bottom tend to stay there too, regardless of intelligence and work ethic.

other-wordsHow does that relate to conspiracy theories? It means that getting a college degree didn’t stop Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from believing that Jews have space lasers, or some nonsense. (I grew up Jewish and they gave us dreidels and gelt, but no space lasers.)

In my own research, I hear people often reduce social problems to failures of understanding. The constant refrain I hear is, “If they knew what I knew, they’d believe what I believe.” That’s absolutely not true.

Smart human beings, even highly educated ones, do things that don’t make logical sense all the time. People join cults, or stay with abusive partners. They become so committed to a debunked idea that vaccines are harmful that they fail to protect their children from preventable illnesses.

Perhaps learning to understand why people fall prey to conspiracy theories can help us learn how to reduce people’s susceptibility to them. But whatever the reason, it does no good to write them off as “uneducated.”

That’s not just classist — it’s wrong.

jill richardson other words flaglerlive Jill Richardson is the author of “Recipe for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It.” She is a columnist for OtherWords.org. 

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pogo says

    February 26, 2021 at 8:36 am

    @JR says, “…That’s not just classist — it’s wrong.”

    She right. They know better. There’s a word for that too.

    People take reality for granted.
    — Teller

  2. Justsayin says

    February 26, 2021 at 10:33 am

    I am old enough to remember when a elected official told us Guam would tip over if we put to troops on the island. There are stupid people on both sides.

  3. snapperhead says

    February 26, 2021 at 2:04 pm

    I’m glad some the wing nuts don’t buy into the vaccines-the sooner I can get mine.

  4. Ann Brisson says

    February 28, 2021 at 5:30 pm

    These are not theories, they are based in fact and evidence can prove them. Problem is the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land that I though beyond reproach, is refusing to hear the evidence. That is their responsibility to the American People. What if the results were in Trump’s favor, would you want proof!

  5. Just sayin' says

    March 8, 2021 at 1:42 pm

    Conspiracy is a bad word until proven a fact…..just saying!

  6. Steve says

    March 15, 2021 at 10:55 am

    So then bring the evidence. Surely if its that apparent to be the Courts Congress Everyone would want to know. So where is it.?

  7. Mike C says

    May 21, 2021 at 4:37 pm

    Ann, the system works just fine. A few glitches here and there as always, but no widespread conspiracy, no evidence of massive voter fraud. 60 judges and 50 state election officials, many of them Republicans, said so. You are believing in a Big Lie! People were just sick of Trump and that’s why he lost. I come from a place where we have known Donald Trump for many many years. To you and those who think he is concerned about you and your life, you are being conned. He is a con man, a dishonest businessman and an immoral opportunist who keeps asking for your money. Wake up.

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