Study Finds a Chilling Link Between Personality Type and Trump Support — Malevolent traits and reduced empathy go hand in hand.

You're not seriously pretending that MAGAts are not malevolent, violent, narcissistic, uneducated, unthoughtful people, are you? You're having a fucking stroke about a single professor who knows more about the subject than you do while you completely try to avoid his correct conclusion. The cult is dangerous and it is very much real. Continue to disregard reality at your own peril.
Pretending? No. I'm flat out saying that most, the vast majority, of Trump supporters are not "malevolent, violent, narcissistic, uneducated, unthoughtful people." I'm saying that some quack academic claiming otherwise is dead flat, completely wrong. And, yes, it is important to point that out because as your posts indicate, as but one example of this, you are perfectly willing to glom onto and into an Appeal to authority fallacy because it jibes with your world and political views.
 
I'll give him due credit that he's one of the, like, three MAGAts on JPP who can write a sentence, but he's completely fucking gone-zo. Anything he doesn't agree with he calls biased or fake. He grasps at wind to self validate. He also become utterly delusional and irrational after the last election, so I swept him into the dustbin like the rest of the KKKult.
No, if it's biased or fake I point it out. Often, when it isn't I simply post nothing about it.
 
Pretending? No. I'm flat out saying that most, the vast majority, of Trump supporters are not "malevolent, violent, narcissistic, uneducated, unthoughtful people." I'm saying that some quack academic claiming otherwise is dead flat, completely wrong. And, yes, it is important to point that out because as your posts indicate, as but one example of this, you are perfectly willing to glom onto and into an Appeal to authority fallacy because it jibes with your world and political views.
Funny the majority of trump supporters have shown the world they are exactly that.
 
Neumann's essay in the first post was critical of trump and his supporters, and T.A. must defend trump at all costs. Even though there is no info anywhere on Neumann's political affiliation.
I noticed the same thing. I will admit that a drop of my soul still wants to give Terry credit and credibility. When I dive into his assertions -- as I have just done in this thread -- I am reminded that he's a fucking nutcase. Neumann is not overtly political. His writing is perfectly professional. You're right: He said something critical of TACO, so Terry lost his nonexistent mind. The age of Trump has decimated so, so many minds, reputations, and characters. It's sad to see so many people turn their backs on themselves.
 
I picked four that show his political bias. I'm not claiming he was politically biased in all of his work, only that he is politically biased and that effects his work when he is doing something that's politically related.
He didn't exhibit bias, you idiot. He made claims substantiated by research. You also only read the titles of some of his papers, not the papers themselves. It's time for your driver license to be revoked.
 
I picked four that show his political bias. I'm not claiming he was politically biased in all of his work, only that he is politically biased and that effects his work when he is doing something that's politically related.
He was writing about a certain group and his words might also apply to left-wing authoritarian leaders, but we're not living under one.

You brought your own bias to this because you put psychology on the same level as basket-weaving.
 
Pretending? No. I'm flat out saying that most, the vast majority, of Trump supporters are not "malevolent, violent, narcissistic, uneducated, unthoughtful people." I'm saying that some quack academic claiming otherwise is dead flat, completely wrong. And, yes, it is important to point that out because as your posts indicate, as but one example of this, you are perfectly willing to glom onto and into an Appeal to authority fallacy because it jibes with your world and political views.
Ok, honey, you keep "flat out saying" whatever you want. It's actually a requirement of your membership. Nothing that you dislike can be true. Everything that supports your delusions is fact. Do you even realize how lost you are? You were reasonable and relatively normal a year ago. Now you're swatting at imaginary bats above your head.
 

Explains @Stone @Uncensored2008 @goat @RB 60 @anonymoose @trunt @slowlame @Text Drivers are Killers @IBDaMann @Grokmaster @Lionfish @Truth Detector @Based Chad @T. A. Gardner @volsrocks @Libhater @Tobytone @Kurmugeon @gfm7175 @MAGAt @Yakuda @ULTRA MAGA @Into the Night etc.

In the years since Donald Trump emerged as the face of American conservatism, psychologists have grappled with a vexing question: why do so many Americans remain loyal to a morally questionable leader? Donald Trump has made tens of thousands of false or misleading claims, he had an affair with an adult star, and consistently misused donations, and that’s just the tip of the iceberg; yet, he maintains a cult-like loyal following.

A new study, published this month in the Journal of Research in Personality, suggests part of the answer may lie deep within the personalities of his supporters.

The research, led by psychologist Craig Neumann of the University of North Texas, examined whether certain personality traits—those associated with callousness, manipulation, and even enjoyment of others’ suffering—correlate with conservative ideology and support for Trump. The findings are striking: people who view Trump favorably are more likely to score higher on measures of malevolent traits and lower on empathy and compassion.



The 6th Jan Capitol breach. Credit: Flickr

Malevolence and the Modern Right​

The study analyzed responses from over 9,000 U.S. adults in two large surveys conducted before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants completed questionnaires that assessed their political beliefs, empathy levels, and personality traits. The results consistently showed a pattern: the more favorably someone rated Trump, the more likely they were to display traits like narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy—traits grouped under what researchers call a malevolent disposition.


The reverse also held true. Participants who scored higher on benevolent traits like humanism, faith in humanity, and respect for others tended to oppose Trump and lean politically liberal.

These patterns held across gender and racial groups, though there were key differences. White men who scored higher on psychopathic traits also showed stronger support for Trump and conservative ideology. Among men of minority status, however, psychopathy did not predict political ideology. This variation, researchers propose, could stem from differing lived experiences with social power, privilege, and marginalization.

The study also looked at empathy, and the findings were disturbing once again. Trump supporters reported significantly lower levels of affective empathy (emotional concern for others) and higher levels of dissonant empathy (enjoyment of others’ pain). Interestingly, their ability to understand how others feel (cognitive empathy) remained intact.



In other words, they know what others are feeling, they simply appear to care less, on average. They enjoy others’ pain more as well. This adds a chilling nuance to the political landscape. It’s not that supporters of Trump can’t understand suffering—it’s that they may find it unimportant, or even gratifying.


The Psychological Foundations of Conservatism​

Psychologists have long linked conservative ideology with traits like authoritarianism and the belief that some groups should dominate others. That’s not new, nor is it Trump-specific. However, the new study builds on that foundation by incorporating more extreme personality traits like callousness and lack of empathy into the mix.

Trump’s political brand, however, seems to turbocharge things. From mocking disabled reporters to separating children from their families, his behavior is a textbook depiction of aggression and disregard for other people. The fact that so many people view these actions positively, they say, reflects something deeper than policy preference. It says that many people agree with such dark acts.

“This paper was several years in the making, starting as a result of the 2016 election,” Neumann said. “[It] was designed to address why some people might view favorably a political figure with a history of business failures, bankruptcies, misogynistic statements caught on video, use of charity money for a self-portrait, etc.”


The answer may lie in the concept of “motivated social cognition”—a theory that political beliefs are shaped by facts and values, but also psychological needs. These include a desire for certainty, fear of threats, and a preference for rigid hierarchies.

“Political ideology… is not necessarily a good or bad thing, if it involves ideas about how to productively arrange our world,” Neumann added. “However, if a given ideology is fundamentally about one group’s malevolent domination of other individuals, then we should ask ourselves if this is the type of (uncivil) society we want to live in.”

The Politics of Kindness​

But what about the benevolent traits? These traits were strongly linked with liberal political beliefs and a rejection of Trump.

Participants who scored higher on benevolent scales tended to report more compassion, greater belief in the goodness of others, and less attraction to dominance and aggression. These individuals exhibited a distinct psychological orientation rooted in affiliation, care, and prosocial behavior.

In contrast, Trump supporters showed the opposite pattern: higher scores on malevolent traits and lower on benevolent ones, shaping their political identity.

The gender divide was also telling. Men in the sample were more likely to display malevolent traits, and among men, these traits more strongly predicted support for Trump. Women, by contrast, scored higher on benevolence and showed weaker links between personality and politics.


The authors are careful to stress that their findings reflect group averages, not individual labels. Not every Trump supporter is callous, just as not every liberal is overflowing with compassion. Personality traits exist along a continuum, and individuals vary widely within each group.

Still, the patterns are meaningful. In a democracy, political choices are often viewed as reflections of policy preference or economic interest. This study suggests they may also express something deeper—something rooted in the structure of personality itself.

The implications of the research extend beyond Trump or even American politics. If deep-seated personality traits—especially those that incline people toward kindness or cruelty—shape political ideology, then policy debates reflect, at least in part, clashes over human nature itself.

And in such battles, understanding the psychological terrain may be just as important as winning the argument.
It's not surprising that MAGAts are violent, abusive and have a criminal mind. They are sick people.

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No, if it's biased or fake I point it out. Often, when it isn't I simply post nothing about it.
No, you only call something "biased or fake" when it criticizes the Fat Fuck leaving skid marks on the Oval Office furniture. You're not fooling anyone, Terry. You're a cultist, a partisan, and a completely transparent victim to a movement that you could have been better than.
 
Pretending? No. I'm flat out saying that most, the vast majority, of Trump supporters are not "malevolent, violent, narcissistic, uneducated, unthoughtful people." I'm saying that some quack academic claiming otherwise is dead flat, completely wrong. And, yes, it is important to point that out because as your posts indicate, as but one example of this, you are perfectly willing to glom onto and into an Appeal to authority fallacy because it jibes with your world and political views.
Neumann wrote "The findings are striking: people who view Trump favorably are more likely to score higher on measures of malevolent traits and lower on empathy and compassion."

If you haven't seen this on JPP, you haven't been paying attention.
 
I noticed the same thing. I will admit that a drop of my soul still wants to give Terry credit and credibility. When I dive into his assertions -- as I have just done in this thread -- I am reminded that he's a fucking nutcase. Neumann is not overtly political. His writing is perfectly professional. You're right: He said something critical of TACO, so Terry lost his nonexistent mind. The age of Trump has decimated so, so many minds, reputations, and characters. It's sad to see so many people turn their backs on themselves.
Most of his work is dreck, not just the political stuff. He's almost on the level of publishing bullshit as "science."
 
Neumann wrote "The findings are striking: people who view Trump favorably are more likely to score higher on measures of malevolent traits and lower on empathy and compassion."

If you haven't seen this on JPP, you haven't been paying attention.
I've seen mostly the exact opposite. The TDS / Trump haters going all out to attack Trump and Trump supporters. The latest is the Epstein files. You even have some posters changing their avatar and tag lines to aggressively push that narrative. You have Dutch Dork making anti-Trump memes by the dozen. Every article or whatever the TDS crowd can find to pillory Trump and supporters gets posted, like this thread, with raving lunatic calls of essentially, "See! Proof that Trump is the Devil incarnate, and his followers are pond scum!"
 
Prove it using multiple sources that aren't chock-a-block with TDS. That should be easy if your assertion is true.
You're not going to believe anything we share with you because your TDS is literally off the charts. You somehow became one of the most unhinged posters I don't have on Ignore. Your research is up to you because you're not a serious person.
 
I've seen mostly the exact opposite. The TDS / Trump haters going all out to attack Trump and Trump supporters. The latest is the Epstein files. You even have some posters changing their avatar and tag lines to aggressively push that narrative. You have Dutch Dork making anti-Trump memes by the dozen. Every article or whatever the TDS crowd can find to pillory Trump and supporters gets posted, like this thread, with raving lunatic calls of essentially, "See! Proof that Trump is the Devil incarnate, and his followers are pond scum!"
To be clear, Trump is the devil incarnate, and his followers are worse than pond scum. They lie, cheat, and rape children. Those are your people, Terry, not mine. I encourage you to think about how you became like this. I have no doubt that you cannot be redeemed, but you should at least understand how you became an unthinking, selfish, delusional asshole.
 
You're not going to believe anything we share with you because your TDS is literally off the charts. You somehow became one of the most unhinged posters I don't have on Ignore. Your research is up to you because you're not a serious person.
You want me to believe and accept that between a third and half of all Americans are essentially insane serial killers. That's what this academic's work implies. You'd have to be utterly insane to believe that.
 
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