CANTERBURY, England — “Doomsday prepping” or stockpiling food, medicine, weapons and other supplies in case of an apocalyptic scenario has long been considered peculiar behavior only exhibited by conspiracy theorists and other extremists in the United States. However, such prepping has actually been steadily on the rise in the U.S. over the past decade. So, what’s causing this surge in stockpiled rice packets and underground bunkers? One group of researchers say it is an ever growing sense of impending doom in American culture.
Many have speculated that this surge in doomsday preppers over the last 10 years was linked to an extreme political reaction among many conservatives to Barack Obama’s initial election in 2008, but a new study out of the United Kingdom finds that neither the Obama presidency nor extreme right-wing conspiracy theories in general are the main cause of this growing phenomenon.
Study Finds Rise In 'Doomsday Prepping' Due To Mainstream American 'Culture Of Fear' - Study Finds
Obamageddon: Fear, the Far Right, and the Rise of “Doomsday” Prepping in Obama's America | Journal of American Studies | Cambridge Core
The irrationality of this is nauseating. The paper fails to capture the fact that main purveyors of this paranoia are in the business of selling 'survival kits'. Sell fear, sell solutions to that fear
Many have speculated that this surge in doomsday preppers over the last 10 years was linked to an extreme political reaction among many conservatives to Barack Obama’s initial election in 2008, but a new study out of the United Kingdom finds that neither the Obama presidency nor extreme right-wing conspiracy theories in general are the main cause of this growing phenomenon.
Study Finds Rise In 'Doomsday Prepping' Due To Mainstream American 'Culture Of Fear' - Study Finds
Obamageddon: Fear, the Far Right, and the Rise of “Doomsday” Prepping in Obama's America | Journal of American Studies | Cambridge Core
The irrationality of this is nauseating. The paper fails to capture the fact that main purveyors of this paranoia are in the business of selling 'survival kits'. Sell fear, sell solutions to that fear
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