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Typically and historically, political forces on the right
               (conservative) side of the political spectrum rather than on the left
               (liberal) side generate and spread fake news and claims of fake news
               more often. “On Facebook, extreme hard right pages . . . share the
               widest range of known junk news sources and circulate more junk
               news than all the other audiences put together,” wrote technology
               researchers from Oxford University in Britain in 2018. Psychologists
               say that people with conservative leanings tend to be warier of
               danger and potential threats, such as threats of crime or terrorism,
               than are liberals. And since many fake news stories tell of secret
               plots, crimes, and other frightening events, they are more likely to
               capture the attention of conservatives than of liberals. “Conservatives
               approach the situation from the start with greater [reaction] to threat,
               a greater prior belief [as] to the level of danger in the world, so it is
               logical for the conservative to take more seriously information about
               hazards than the liberal does,” explains Daniel Fessler, a professor of
               anthropology at the University of California–Los Angeles.

               What Fake News Isn’t
               The tactic of claiming that a legitimate news story is fake is typically
               used by politicians and other public figures to dismiss real news stories
               that present them in a negative light. Donald Trump, who won the
               US presidential election in 2016, often charges that stories that accurately
               accuse him or his associates of wrongdoing are “fake news.” But he isn’t
               alone. A number of other US politicians have adopted this technique.
               Paul LePage, the governor of Maine, dismissed a 2017 story about him
               considering a run for the US Senate as “fake news.” LePage’s beef with
               the story was that it did not adequately praise his accomplishments
               as governor and that it included quotes from a liberal political science
               professor. Brooke Ashjian, president of the school board in Fresno,
               California, accused a local reporter of writing fake news in a series of
               critical newspaper articles about high rates of teen pregnancy in Fresno.








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