Americans Actually Dislike Each Other: The Unsavory Truth Behind the Data
What’s the data behind the data? According to data scientist Andrea Jones-Rooy, America-by-the-numbers doesn’t always add up to a pretty picture. Take, for example, the political divisions in American society, the fabled ideological cleavages that have supposedly splintered America into warring tribes. “We don’t really disagree,” Jones-Rooy says about her fellow Americans, “we just dislike each other.” That’s the rather uncharitable truth that Jones-Rooy extracts from the data. But not all her numbers represent bad news. On immigration, another hot button issue, the data suggests that the undocumented population is actually far smaller than most people think. And Americans mostly agree on immigration, she says, even if those conclusions won’t exactly thrill proponents of a more liberal immigration policy.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
How to Tell the American Story
Phew! When AI ate the internet
A Chilling Plot to Grab the World's Food and Water Resources
How to Get Beyond the Shame of Sexual Violence
America's First Great Naturalist
The Uncomfortable Truths Our Dogs Would Tell Us If They Could Talk
Why Novels Must Be More Believable than Non-Fiction Books
Remembering Judy Garland, Michael Jackson, the Spice Girls and Stevie Wonder
From Pizza and Meze to Ramen and Borscht: Unscrambling the Politics of National Dishes
Is most of rural America really plotting to destroy democracy?
On the Importance of Being Batshit Crazy
American Whitelash: Wesley Lowery on the cost of progress in an increasingly multiracial America
The American Dream of a "Tossed Salad": Luma Mufleh on reconciling her identity as a gay Muslim woman with an Arab-turned-American refugee