Media culture: Why Americans believe Obama is a Muslim and McCain is senile

EAST LANSING, Mich. — There's something beyond ignorance and topic avoidance that motivates Americans to believe President Obama is a Muslim, according to a study of 'smear' campaigns.

Being Muslim is a smear? Apparently so, though the people who are going to believe it despite his denial didn't vote for him anyway so the benefit is unclear. But it's all racial, the researchers say,and people are more likely to accept falsehoods when subtle clues remind them of ways in which Obama is different from them.

Subtle clues? Like being rich? No, Muslim is not equated with rich, they mean being black. Like spy movies during the Cold War, right-wing racism was a lot easier to sell before a black man became president.

But Obama detractors are illogical and fueled by an "irresponsible" media culture that allows political pundits and "talking heads" to perpetuate lies. You know, lies like about Bush's military service, Bush doing cocaine, etc.

"Careless or biased media outlets are largely responsible for the propagation of these falsehoods, which catch on like wildfire," said Spee Kosloff , visiting professor of psychology at Michigan State University. "And then social differences can motivate acceptance of these lies."

A Pew Research Center poll in August 2010 found that 18 percent of Americans believe Obama is a Muslim – up from 11 percent in March 2009. Kosloff noted that the poll was conducted before Obama's recent comments supporting the right for Muslims to build a mosque near New York's Ground Zero.

Kosloff and colleagues launched their study prior to the 2008 U.S. presidential election, as the candidates were being bombarded with smear campaigns. It's the first comprehensive experimental study of the psychological factors that motivate Americans to believe the lies. The findings are published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

In four separate experiments (three before the election and one after), the researchers looked at both conscious and unconscious acceptance of political smears by mostly white, non-Muslim college students. For the conscious trials the participants were shown a false blog report arguing that Obama is a Muslim or a socialist or that John McCain is senile. The unconscious trials involved gauging how rapidly subjects could identify smear-relevant words such as "Muslim" or "turban" after Obama's name was presented subliminally.

Among the results:

  • On average, participants who supported McCain said there is a 56 percent likelihood Obama is a Muslim. But when they were asked to fill out a demographic card asking for their own race, the likelihood jumped to 77 percent. Kosloff said this shows that simply thinking about a social category that differentiated participants from Obama was enough to get them to believe the smear.
  • Participants undecided about the candidates said there is a 43 percent chance McCain is senile – a number that increased to 73 percent when they simply listed their own age on a card.
  • Undecided participants said there is a 25 percent chance Obama is a socialist – a number that jumped to 62 percent when they considered race. "Even though being a socialist has nothing to do with race," Kosloff said, "irrationally they tied the two together."

Kosloff said the increase in belief that Obama is Muslim likely reflects a growing disenchantment with his presidency – a sense that people feel Obama is not on their side.

"When people are unsatisfied with the president – whether it's the way he's handling the economy, health care of Afghanistan – our research suggests that this only fuels their readiness to accept untrue rumors," Kosloff said.

"As his job rating goes down, suggesting that people feel like he's not ideologically on their side, we see an increase in this irrational belief that he's a Muslim," he added. "Unfortunately, in America, many people dislike Muslims so they'll label Obama as Muslim when they feel different from him."