No, Americans are not united

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To the Editor:

The “Americans are more united than we think”, through Kristen Soltis Anderson (January 1, January 1):

Mrs. Anderson displays survey numbers to apparently show how, according to Americans are in questions (for example, the skepticism of the media, dissatisfaction with our democracy, etc. ).

More than once, I was surprised that experts, pointing out mass increases in Americans, agreed that the country is on the “track”, presenting it as an agreement. The fault is the apparent monitoring: why do respondents think the country is in the follow -up? Or that the media are failing us?

This one adheres to the position that the genuine data is in: respondents that the media fails because it’s too “woke” are unlikely to agree on almost anything that it fails with because it goes to the far right.

Mrs. Anderson is a republican vote that, as such, is probably desperate to locate the tea license that tells him that Americans are not in a virtual civil war. But if the Americans unified, how did we get to an election in which, with campaigns that emphasize diametrically contrary ideals, ideals and policies, the effects for the president were incredibly close to?

Jill Raymondsilver Spring, MD.

To the editor:

The fundamental causes that have produced the widespread cynicism about institutions and even our democracy itself are the result of decades of propaganda by the radical right against government. This campaign has permeated the consciousness of many Americans who are looking for simplistic answers to their own misfortunes.

What has exacerbated the challenge is that many of those Americans have been radicalized to such an extent that they are no longer interested in a significant reform, but have adapted a burned ideology through all Donald Trump and their magic movement.

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