These maps show something I've been saying for a while: Part of the toxicity of modern political discourse is that by agreeing with one question, it's assumed you agree with all the others and those views are forcibly imposed on you because of it. In this case it's about a left wing question, but I think you'd find the same with right wing questions where one popular view ends up being about the same where people agree with one thing but don't necessarily agree with the questions that follow.
It sort of drives division in a couple ways: First, obviously it makes it appear that more people believe radical views than the do. But secondly it means that people who would otherwise agree with a view might loudly denounce the view for fear of having other views they don't agree with imposed upon them.
It sort of drives division in a couple ways: First, obviously it makes it appear that more people believe radical views than the do. But secondly it means that people who would otherwise agree with a view might loudly denounce the view for fear of having other views they don't agree with imposed upon them.
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