|
This article
looks at three measuring instruments-the Right-Wing Authorita-rianism
Scale, the Social Dominance Orientation Scale, and the Attitudes
About Reality Scale-used to examine covert ideology and its
relationship to social and political beliefs and behaviors.
These scales share similar ideological components involving
abdication of moral responsibility to an outside agent, belief
that one's own ideology represents the only form of truth,
and negative beliefs about individ-uals who are not members
of one's own group. Evidence is provided to suggest that radical
fundamentalists and some groups within U.S. society share
ideological beliefs that differ in degree rather than kind.
These beliefs make it easy for them to divide the world into
"us" and "them" and exacerbate the present conflict.
|