Wednesday, April 24, 2024

ANNALS OF DeSANTISTAN: Man setting himself on fire is shocking. But that Floridians believe conspiracies is unsurprising (Palm Beach Post/GANNETT)

The man who set himself on fire in NYC outside the very first Trump criminal trial was from St. Augustine.  Our Nation's Oldest City was described as "one of the last bastions of the Ku Klux Klan by a former federal lawman, also our former County Commission Chairman Ben Rich, Sr. in 2008 (Folio Weekly).  From Palm Beach Post//GANNETT:


Man setting himself on fire is shocking. But that Floridians believe conspiracies is unsurprising

A study released in March cited the state as tops in the country for conspiracy theorists and believers. The report by a sports-betting and data-tools website, listed Florida as America's 'hot spot.'

Antonio Fins
Palm Beach Post

That a St. Augustine resident set himself ablaze outside the Manhattan courthouse where Donald Trump is on trial was shocking. But that the individual, Max Azzarello, turned out to be a Floridian who appeared to believe conspiracy theories, as police and media reports said, is far less surprising.

A study released in March cited the state as tops in the country for conspiracy theorists and believers. The report by Oddspedia, a sports-betting and data-tools website, listed Florida as America's No. 1 conspiracy theory "hot spot," while the Sunshine State's residents "ranked as the second-most gullible." Florida also landed as fifth-most skeptical, as in questioning or doubting accepted ideas, beliefs or claims.

Given the tensions and passions around the 2024 presidential election and the former president's court proceedings, conspiracy theorizing in Florida is in overdrive. But a spokesperson for Oddspedia said the analytics review reveals more deep-seeded reasons.

Adopted Florida son Donald Trump has alleged a host conspiracies, from doubting President Obama's birth certificate to accusing the Biden administration of orchestrating criminal cases against him. But a report says Floridians' embrace of conspiracy theories has more complex reasons.

"Florida's status as the No. 1 state for conspiracy theorists can be attributed to not just its politics, though that obviously plays a pivotal role," said Shing Mon Chung in answering questions about the study via an email.

The state's "significant income and social disparities," she said, "can lead to disenfranchisement, creating fertile grounds for conspiracy theories to take root." Other factors, like the consumption of disinformation through social-media channels, are more universal.

Conspiracy theorizing is multipartisan but embraced more by Republicans

The Oddspedia research unearthed a complicated reality about those who voice seemingly outlandish theories: They are found in all political corners.

The survey noted that while just over a third of Republicans (35%) surveyed expressed "significant or moderate belief" in unproven theories, so did 20% of those not registered with a party and 14% of Democrats. Conspiracy theorizing is arguably a national pastime with 4-in-5 Americans acknowledging at least some belief in them.

In the Oddspedia report, a seemingly equal mix of red and blue states lined up right behind Florida with California, Texas, Alabama, and New York rounding out the top five.

Support for political figures with unconventional views also defied easy explanation.

Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. attends a Cesar Chavez Day event at Union Station on March 30, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.


4 comments:

Anonymous said...

DeSantis called DEI a cottage industry. What does call the church and the criminal justice system? I'd love to see him contextualize those two things.

Anonymous said...

That last comment was obscured by the article text..it overlayed the comment. You're incompetent and lazy Slavin. If people come here and see shit like that then they're gonna know you half ass shit. Already all this is posted to a blog platform from the 1980's.

Ed Slavin said...

I can just feel the love. Are you the poster who mocked my "obsolete vocabulary?' As Dan Quayle said, "I wear your scorn as a badge of honor."

Anonymous said...

I can't even read your comment. The article text covers your comment so it's not legible. If you were double checking your work you'd know that but you're trifling and lazy.