Evolution of political views on the internet (user search)
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  Evolution of political views on the internet (search mode)
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Author Topic: Evolution of political views on the internet  (Read 942 times)
LAKISYLVANIA
Lakigigar
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« on: August 18, 2022, 05:31:04 PM »

Based on a discussion where i went a bit off-track here https://talkelections.org/FORUM/index.php?topic=518837.msg8728349#msg8728349

Do you feel differences in internet culture based on the language of the site or origin of most nationalities on that site? Europe vs North America?

What sites in particular have a distinct political culture. I would say Talk Elections is an example on averagely/overall esp. comparing to the US standard as a center-left internet site, but what other examples are there on other sites in the US/internationally/different countries, and how do they lean. Social media can also be a factor here?

Are views very different based on the generation/age of a certain communities/sites. I've noticed that some sites in particular are younger and more international than others? And why is that the case. For example is it that Gen Z is generally more internationally, less divided by gender that they tend to be more left wing, because back in the days (in the time of millennial internet generation) people active on the internet used to be generally in the upper middle class, mostly white and male, while the internet might be more accessible. Is that still the case, or have things sharply changed? Do you feel like the internet has become more diverse in terms of demographics? Or has the person Donald Trump caused the internet to move left for example? Does the internet have a large portion of educated suburban people in the US demographically compared to non-college working class whites.

Would be interested to hear takes & opinions on this matter.
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