Symbolic Strength More Important Than Facts When It Comes To Misinformation
from the disinformation-is-an-identity dept
Why do some people endorse claims that can easily be disproved? It’s one thing to believe false information, but another to actively stick with something that’s obviously wrong.
Our new research, published in the Journal of Social Psychology, suggests that some people consider it a “win” to lean in to known falsehoods.
We are social psychologists who study political psychology and how people reason about reality. During the pandemic, we surveyed 5,535 people across eight countries to investigate why people believed COVID-19 misinformation, like false claims that 5G networks cause the virus.
The strongest predictor of whether someone believed in COVID-19-related misinformation and risks related to the vaccine was whether they viewed COVID-19 prevention efforts in terms of symbolic strength and weakness. In other words, this group focused on whether an action would make them appear to fend off or “give in” to untoward influence.
This factor outweighed how people felt about COVID-19 in general, their thinking style and even their political beliefs.
Our survey measured it on a scale of how much people agreed with sentences including “Following coronavirus prevention guidelines means you have backed down” and “Continuous coronavirus coverage in the media is a sign we are losing.” Our interpretation is that people who responded positively to these statements would feel they “win” by endorsing misinformation – doing so can show “the enemy” that it will not gain any ground over people’s views.
When meaning is symbolic, not factual
Rather than consider issues in light of actual facts, we suggest people with this mindset prioritize being independent from outside influence. It means you can justify espousing pretty much anything – the easier a statement is to disprove, the more of a power move it is to say it, as it symbolizes how far you’re willing to go.
When people think symbolically this way, the literal issue – here, fighting COVID-19 – is secondary to a psychological war over people’s minds. In the minds of those who think they’re engaged in them, psychological wars are waged over opinions and attitudes, and are won via control of belief and messaging. The U.S. government at various times has used the concept of psychological war to try to limit the influence of foreign powers, pushing people to think that literal battles are less important than psychological independence.
By that same token, vaccination, masking or other COVID-19 prevention efforts could be seen as a symbolic risk that could “weaken” one psychologically even if they provide literal physical benefits. If this seems like an extreme stance, it is – the majority of participants in our studies did not hold this mindset. But those who did were especially likely to also believe in misinformation.
In an additional study we ran that focused on attitudes around cryptocurrency, we measured whether people saw crypto investment in terms of signaling independence from traditional finance. These participants, who, like those in our COVID-19 study, prioritized a symbolic show of strength, were more likely to believe in other kinds of misinformation and conspiracies, too, such as that the government is concealing evidence of alien contact.
In all of our studies, this mindset was also strongly associated with authoritarian attitudes, including beliefs that some groups should dominate others and support for autocratic government. These links help explain why strongman leaders often use misinformation symbolically to impress and control a population.
Why people endorse misinformation
Our findings highlight the limits of countering misinformation directly, because for some people, literal truth is not the point.
For example, President Donald Trump incorrectly claimed in August 2025 that crime in Washington D.C. was at an all-time high, generating countless fact-checks of his premise and think pieces about his dissociation from reality.
But we believe that to someone with a symbolic mindset, debunkers merely demonstrate that they’re the ones reacting, and are therefore weak. The correct information is easily available, but is irrelevant to someone who prioritizes a symbolic show of strength. What matters is signaling one isn’t listening and won’t be swayed.
In fact, for symbolic thinkers, nearly any statement should be justifiable. The more outlandish or easily disproved something is, the more powerful one might seem when standing by it. Being an edgelord – a contrarian online provocateur – or outright lying can, in their own odd way, appear “authentic.”
Some people may also view their favorite dissembler’s claims as provocative trolling, but, given the link between this mindset and authoritarianism, they want those far-fetched claims acted on anyway. The deployment of National Guard troops to Washington, for example, can be the desired end goal, even if the offered justification is a transparent farce.
Is this really 5-D chess?
It is possible that symbolic, but not exactly true, beliefs have some downstream benefit, such as serving as negotiation tactics, loyalty tests, or a fake-it-till-you-make-it long game that somehow, eventually, becomes a reality. Political theorist Murray Edelman, known for his work on political symbolism, noted that politicians often prefer scoring symbolic points over delivering results – it’s easier. Leaders can offer symbolism when they have little tangible to provide.
Randy Stein is Associate Professor of Marketing, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona and Abraham Rutchick is Professor of Psychology, California State University, Northridge. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Filed Under: disinformation, identity, misinformation, political beliefs, symbolism




Comments on “Symbolic Strength More Important Than Facts When It Comes To Misinformation”
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Flat Earthers…
Is there a distinction between ‘believing’ something, and ‘espousing’ it? It seems like if they know something is disproven but say it anyway, some of them may not actually believe it.
It seems difficult (impossible?) to capture in a self response survey, but this could matter in some situations. E.g., someone who lies consistently about the covid vaccine, but secretly gets it for themselves, would be different than someone who actually believes the lies. It would also be interesting to know how much espousing particular beliefs made people more likely to eventually truly adopt them, ala Vonnegut’s “We are what we pretend to be”.
Does it matter how the debunking is done? It often seems like more neutral/analytical debunking fails, but debunking mixed with moral judgement or social standing (e.g. scorn) might work better. Because scorn works on that symbolic playing field rather than just a pure fact check.
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You’ll find a better form of debunking in storytelling. Giving people all the facts and figures you can find—all the data, all the numbers, all the studies—may not change their minds because they have a narrative in their head and saying “this is what the numbers prove” won’t exchange one narrative for another. It’s why blatantly false narratives such as “Haitian immigrants are eating pets” or “JD Vance is a couchfucker” stick in people’s heads even if you tell them “um, ackshually, what you saw was some fake bullshit, the data says [blah blah blah yakity-shmakity] and you’re a dumbass for believing the fake bullshit”. Nobody likes being told they’re an idiot; everyone likes being told a story. The trick lies in making the narrative compelling while also grounding it in fact. Trump managed to eke out wins in two of his three campaigns partly because he had better narratives/stories to tell than the Democrats—or at least better enough stories that they struck a chord with Americans more than the narratives Democrats were trying to sell. While I hate giving the bastards credit for anything, the GOP really does excel at controlling and creating narratives (fact-based or otherwise) that help their agenda. You can’t fight belief with reason or else we’d all be atheists—you have to fight it with stories and narratives that can replace shitty beliefs with something better.
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Excellent analysis. I just wanted to add that I think these people see Trump (or whatever other fascist) as the protagonist of the narrative they are compelled by. And like the protagonist of a book or movie, they project themselves onto him. That’s a big part of why this narrative-izing is so effective and plays so strongly into the cult of personality. Every story needs a hero.
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It’s definitely part of the reason they voted for Trump. He tells them a story about how the government—and the Democrats, by extension—have made the lives of undocumented immigrants, queer people, and [insert any more Repugnant Cultural Others here] better at the expense of “hard-working Americans”. He tells them a story about how things would be better if he could grab the levers of power and get rid of things like DEI and regulations and [insert any more conservative bugaboos here] so “real Americans” can be “unleashed” to make the country great again. Whether he’s got any data or studies to back up his stories doesn’t matter; the vibes are what drives people to believe him, especially if they line up with their view of the world.
But it’s also a bit deeper than mere storytelling. Trump saw how to dupe Republican voters: Lying works, lying while giving them a scapegoat works even better, and lying while giving them a scapegoat and tacit permission to be openly awful people worked so well that he won two out of three elections with that approach. Trumpists want so badly to lash out at what they feel are cultural “chains” holding them back. He gave them permission to shittalk the principles of diversity, equity, and inclusion; he gave them license to attack “wokesters” who tried to “force their beliefs” on everyone by way of asking for a little personally considerate language/treatment; he gave them sanction to generally not give a shit about communities and society in general, especially not the poorest members thereof. For all that is wrong with that son of a bitch, his ability to spin a story that gets the ignorant on his side is unmatched by anyone else in the GOP. (That’s a problem for the GOP, by the way.)
The grand irony of our current political situation lies in how both parties have effectively made their platform “we’re the opposite of our opponents”. While the GOP has an actual plan to go with that contrarianism (Project 2025), the Dems only seem to have “we oppose Trump and everything he does”, and that alone isn’t a compelling platform. Zohran Mamdani might win the mayoral race in NYC because he talked about actual plans he has for the city and the values that those plans represent. While he talked about opposing Trump and whatnot, it wasn’t a centerpiece of his mayoral campaign—nor should it have been. His use of social media to frame the narrative of his campaign has worked so well that the DNC would do well to examine why it worked and try to apply those lessons to their own campaigns. (They won’t, but still.)
Narratives drive everything we do. We tell ourselves stories—about ourselves, about others, about any- and everything—all the time. Crafting a good narrative out of boring data takes either an incredible level of skill honed over years of work or being born a natural bullshitter. Trump falls into the second category, which is why he’s so good at making people think he’s being profound and intelligent when half of what he says is puffery (e.g., “the best [x]”) and “we’ll see what happens”–type deflections. Could Dems do the work to counter that kind of bullshitting? Yes. Will they? Not if they keep listening to the bozos who tell them to keep trying to win Republican voters by tacking to the right.
Oh, and not for nothing, but a fun observation: The Dems could do worse than taking inspiration from pro wrestling in regards to campaign speeches and such. Give me a Dem who can cut a promo as good as Dusty Rhodes’s “Hard Times” and I’ll show you a Dem who fucking gets it. Of course a political speech should have some substance, but the best talkers in pro wrestling understand that the best promos tell a story that make people give a shit about seeing whatever match the promo is building up. That’s how you end up with a promo like “Cane Dewey”. Politics is all about narratives. The Dems need to learn that even with facts and figures and data and all that good shit on their side, they need to tell stories. Taking inspiration from Mick Foley may not be the best idea, but it sure as shit isn’t the worst.
When they are lying about some things, are they lying about all things?
So if a information source is contary to what they are telling you it becomes believed because you know the first source is at least lying sometimes.
For example, I posted something that has been published on Australian TV news.
It was regarded a misinformation because it was I presume contrary to US media.
So which information source is providing misinformation?
Or. Because they know people will believe it anyway.
The worst people are the sick, idiotic, believers and followers.
So snake handlers, but for politics?
I would be interested to hear about a follow-up study looking at connections between “symbolic thinking” and religiosity. “Costly signalling” was already a known and studied behavior, regarding religion.
Reality is whatever you believe it is. (If you believe this, then you have no concept what reality is.) MAGA is founded on this. Basically, MAGA is full of cowards.
This correlates strongly with the post a few months ago about the GOP media and the idea that it strongly resembles improv comedy.
There is a value to the audience in pushing things to absurdity. It ‘owns the libs’ or demonstrates that the speaker isn’t a ‘sheep’.
And it benefits the party by allowing them to dismiss any complaints as being obvious trolling whilst simultaneously moving the Overton window.
No place for wannabe cowboys to hide
This kind of symbolic reasoning is a protest of the global nature of life in the 21st century. People with a cowboy mentality used to be able to be cocooned in their community. There is no shelter from the outside world these days, so these folks have to resort to denial and performative opposition to reality to maintain their cowboy fantasies.
You guys literally said it was impossible for it to have come out of a CCP lab, when there was a bio-lab working on bat viruses right where the break-out started.
Faunci lied about masks. Both ways. (impressive)
The vaccine had negligible (low single digit %) effects on BOTH infection and transmission rates (that is a verifiable, scientific fact), it’s only meaningful effect being severity of disease, mostly in the elderly.
And you are still whining that people do not believe you?!? Buddy, you were often wrong and sometimes lying. The “misinformation” was often correct. GFTO
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Impossible? No. Highly improbable? Yes.
And yet, mask-wearing during the pandemic helped wipe out an entire influenza strain in the US. Mask-wearing may not 100% prevent you from catching or transmitting COVID (or any other airborne disease), but it’s better than wearing nothing at all.
Show me the peer-reviewed studies that back up your assertion of fact. I’ll wait.
You say that like it’s a bad thing that elderly people got less sick if they contracted COVID after getting the vaccine. Are you a death cul—I mean, Republican, by any chance?
Well, who else are we going to believe: hucksters selling horse dewormer and people who think Tylenol causes autism?
Name five instances in which the “misinformation” was proven to be 100% correct in the face of contradictory “information”. Make sure to cite credible sources; right-wing media, conspiracy fantasists, people who revel in their open ignorance, and your ass are not credible sources.
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Pretty sure wiping out the flu strain worldwide not just the US was an unintended consequence and not something they planned for. Do you think we should plan another 2 years of masks and distancing on the hope we may wipe out another flu strain?
the masks where mostly about political theatre, since they did a much better job of preventing transmission then preventing infection.
Pretty sure real infection rates of vaccination have not been peer reviewed.
But 3 months after mass vaccinations became common here we had a mass infection in a underground nightclub, supposedly they where 100% freshly vaccinated, its believed that 85-90% became infected.
Rather then not vaccinate or death cult as you refer to it, perhaps vaccinating old people and people who have frequent contact with old people would be a better idea. We had some issues here with people who work in old persons homes not getting.vaccinated, catching covid and then of course a mass die off. Rather than vaccinate 100+ healthy 20-30 year old with almost zero contact with old people, prioritise the people with contact with old people.
Misinformation, that covid could have transmission outdoors,
Misinformation, that wearing a mask was effective at preventing infection.
Missinformation that a covid vaccine was at traditional vaccine levels of preventing infection.
Misinformation that you could catch covid through a window or through air conditioning.
sorry its been a few years. and perhaps reverse them ie misinformation that you could not catch covid outdoors
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You don’t see the inherit problem with this statement, do you?
“Pretty sure” is you making shit up because you haven’t gone looking for the actual information.
“Supposedly” is you making shit up because you haven’t gone looking for the actual information, “believed” is you compounding that error.
So it is a 100% fact that you can’t contract COVID if you are outdoors?
They are effective at preventing infections, of other people. People who though the advice to wear masks to hinder the spread of COVID was misinformation are fucking idiots because apparently they are to stupid to understand basic English.
So tell us, what is “traditional vaccine levels of preventing infection” and how the COVID vaccine didn’t have that level?
What do this even mean? Don’t lick the glass?
Perhaps improve your memory before posting stupid shit that can be classified as misinformation?
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I mean, it couldn’t hurt. The only real problem with masking was with how too many people got too annoyed with having to put up with some mild physical discomfort for the sake of keeping other people out of harm’s way.
Wait. If they did a better job of preventing transmission, wouldn’t that be a good thing? I mean, that was the whole point of masking: to help prevent transmission of COVID-19.
Yeah, so, guess what? Vaccination isn’t a foolproof safeguard against infection. You can get the flu shot and still get the flu, after all. But a vaccine makes sure your body is ready to fight the disease from infection onward, which means that if you do catch it, you’ll be spared the worst effects of the disease. Would you rather have no vaccine and Long COVID or a vaccine and what might effectively be a bad case of the flu for a weekend?
Part of the scientific process is testing hypotheses to learn new information and see if it proves a hypothesis true. Any information we thought we had on COVID back when the pandemic first began would be tested and studied to make sure it was legitimate. COVID having transmissibility outdoors is one of those bits of info that was eventually studied and proven wrong—at least in the sense that COVID “hung in the air” for long periods of time if people were outdoors.
See above.
Again: Vaccines don’t necessarily prevent infection. They can do that, but there isn’t a 100% guarantee against infection from any vaccine—especially when people don’t take measures to mitigate the spread of the disease (like getting vaccinated, masking, and avoiding people when one is knowingly sick) because our culture is so fucked up.
That…is one I’ve never heard before. Where did you dig that one up, some nutter’s blog about how chemtrails are giving us autism so we don’t see the Illuminati working together with the reverse vampires?
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There were some studies about infection hotspots in enclosed areas due to air conditioning, and I’m not aware they were debunked, so probably more of his unoriginal BS.
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The clown is making shit up again, I guess you were one of the samples used in the research.
As far as Covid-19 disinformation is concerned, the biggest BS story was that the virus emerged in the city with the biggest lab naturally, and lab involvement was a coincidence.
In 2018, the lab was circulating a proposal, Project Defuse which the New York Times explains the science.
The proposal explains the leak, which was cut corners on containment to save money.
So, it was never more likely than not that the virus emerged naturally, given that Wuhan was home to the largest coronavirus lab. It becomes far-fetched to believe that the virus emerged naturally when it is clear that the lab was circulating a proposal to build that exact lab.
I wonder who the dumbbell was that bankrolled that proposal in 2019. Well, being I don’t want to engage in conspiracy theory, I’ll leave it to the Chinese to explain.
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Can you offer evidence that backs up the implied claim of COVID-19 being a man-made virus that was leaked, accidentally or otherwise, from the lab in which it was made? I’m willing to consider such evidence if it’s credible and toss aside reasonable doubts about that conclusion if the evidence supports doing so. But if all you have are deflections on the level of “you must be a dumbass if you think it wasn’t a biological weapon”, you can move along and peddle your conspiracy fantasy somewhere else.
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It’s not unreasonable (especially at first!) to expect the source of the latest virus to mirror the source of several other major diseases which were traced to the wet markets of Guangdong Province, namely SARS and bird flu.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7141584/
That said, given what we know today, I do not think it was unreasonable to believe the lab-leak theory either.
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Can you decide what you want to say? Was it a proposal or was it factually found that it was a lab leak? It can’t be both you know, and until something is factually proven it isn’t facts and definitely not the truth – at best a theory.
No, it not far-fetched at all because that is the most common source of new corona-viruses, animals and animal markets, from which the virus can jump along species and finally start infecting humans. Where do you think most of the new flus originate from? Labs?
And you still did engage in it, didn’t you? You have no actual facts so you have to resort to insinuations.
Could the virus have come from the lab? Yes, but it’s very unlikely for a bunch of reasons. The likelihood of it emerging naturally is far far greater, just like how every corona-viruses before it emerged and the international scientific consensus agrees with that conclusion.
The truth is, everyone who jumped on to the “lab leak theory” stupid-train never got off and they don’t even have the self-awareness to realize that it’s still just a theory even though they think it is a fact, and then they start spinning their arguments from that faulty position – like you just did.
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And even if it were lab-associated, it would have been due to capturing animals to examinefor virii. Very little engineering of viable virii occurrs.
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People seem way too willing to believe in bioengineering of viral weaponry. I blame the Resident Evil franchise. Fuckin’ Umbrella, man…
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If Resident Evil happened in the real world, nothing would’ve happened to Umbrella after RC got nuked.
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It’s really weird how no lab workers were sick, but covid appeared in people in the live animal market.
Also, do go on about how much you don’t understand virology research.