The answer to my question is at the basis of a study at University of Kaiserslautern-Landau and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: People support censorship of free speech when what’s being censored threatens imminent and significant harm to others. The researchers cite prior studies which document support for censorship of pornography on the basis that pornography harms women and support for censorship in children’s movies of scenes considered as harming the children’s proper sense of right and wrong.
Information which is misleading threatens harm, and opinions which threaten harm can be considered misleading. But different people often have dueling conceptions of what would trigger imminent and significant harm. In addition, as shown in one of the researchers’ studies, people often view censorship as undesirable in general. What might persuade someone to change their urge to censor a particular item of information or expression of an opinion?
The answer from the researchers to that question is: A rendition of a true experience of personal victimization which supports the value of the information or opinion now being shared. The researchers’ explanation for this effect is that when we perceive someone as a victim, we go on to consider them—and then, by association, what they’re saying—to be less harmful.
This technique was shown to be effective in a study involving opinions about gun ownership. The progun experience used was, “Tyler supports gun regulations (i.e., restricting access to guns) because he had firsthand experience with guns when his daughter was hit by a stray bullet.” The antigun experience used was, “Tyler supports gun rights (i.e., access to guns) because he had firsthand experience with guns when he shot an intruder to protect his young daughter.” Parallel results were obtained in a follow-on study concerning views of abortion.
The power of storytelling was also found in an earlier project by the same team of researchers about changing political opinions themselves, not just views about political opinions being censored.
Political opinions resist change. New information which confirms previously held beliefs is remembered. New information which contradicts beliefs is ignored or forgotten. The result is political polarization or even dehumanization of those whose views oppose our own. Telling stories dissolved the dehumanization.
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Embed Politically Hot Facts in Personal Stories
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