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[return to ""They Saw a Protest": Cognitive Illiberalism and the Speech-Conduct Distinction [pdf] (2012)"]
1. bethek+Gl[view] [source] 2026-01-09 15:54:20
>>pcahar+(OP)
(2012) in short they show people protest videos and tell each that the protest is about something different. Depending on their ‘inherent biases’ they answer questions about said protest differently. Ergo a video cannot “speak for itself”
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2. pcahar+1o[view] [source] 2026-01-09 16:06:03
>>bethek+Gl
Questions, yes, but specifically questions about the facts in the video (not merely "what should happen to the protesters or police?").

"As one would expect, these differences in case-disposition judgments are mirrored in the subjects’ responses to the fact-perception items. Whereas only 39% of the hierarchical communitarians perceived that the protestors were blocking the pedestrians in the abortion clinic condition, for example, 74% of them saw blocking in the recruitment center condition. Only 45% of egalitarian individualists, in contrast, saw blocking in the recruitment center condition, whereas in the abortion clinic condition 76% of them did. Fully 83% of hierarchical individualists saw blocking in the recruitment center condition, up from 62% in the abortion clinic condition; a 56% majority of egalitarian communitarians saw blocking in that condition, yet only 35% saw such conduct in the recruitment center condition. Responses on other items--such as whether the protestors 'screamed in the face' of pedestrians--displayed similar patterns."

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