Joshua Davis, Ph.D.
@profjoshdavis
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Sociologist at @UofNH | @OU_SocCrim alumnus | Focus on Race, Crime, & Religion. Opinions are my own, data are not.
Norman, OK
Joined November 2017
Saying "make a joke" rather than typing out your racist comment so people can read it is pretty telling, Ryan.
You can stay on CNN if you falsely call every Republican a Nazi and have taken money from Qatar-funded media. Apparently you can't go on CNN if you make a joke. I'm glad America gets to see what CNN stands for.
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ONLINE FIRST Katsyris Rivera-Kientz and Evan Stewart (@EvanStewart23) find that, although Democrats report higher levels of concern about climate change, Republicans report higher levels of preparedness for environmental emergencies. Read more at https://t.co/3l8VcGCEA2
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Seeing a lot of people pile on Dr. Tan for this. I don’t get it. This is excellent advice. There’s nothing wrong with trying to point out a common pitfall that’s more prevalent early in people’s careers and immediately following up with “I did it too, here’s how to avoid it.” 🤷
As a reviewer, it is obvious when something is written by a brand new grad student and very obvious when it is their first paper submission ever. Really heavy on the jargon and misuse of GRE words. The writing is floral without fragrance. (1/2)
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Reminder that Ryan Walters has Oklahoma taxpayers paying $5000/month to a boutique DC communications firm to book him for Fox News appearances like this. The firm is connected to Project 2025. It's run by the Heritage Foundation's VP of Comms, who's married to a P25 mastermind.
Democrats are running from their radical education positions. The reality is that @realDonaldTrump championed parental rights in the classroom and brought a sense of American exceptionalism to education. President Trump has won the education debate!
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Concern for religious liberty in the US is less factual than cultural. When someone says "white Christians are the most/only oppressed group in USA," they're signaling their team. Data doesn't tend to change minds for the same reason I won't support the Chicago Bears. Go Pack Go
It's been 14 years since there has been a significant religious liberty loss at SCOTUS. Religious liberty is secure in the United States. The American Christian community is the most free, most powerful Christian community in the world. Yes, there are some individual
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This is absolutely true. I’ve also not seen anyone pointing out that wishing someone a blessed day isn’t by definition a Christian saying. Wishing blessings on someone is a facet of every major religious tradition.
This is not Christian nationalism and actually helps Christian nationalism by feeding their claims that people oppose them because of their faith, rather than their anti-democratic views.
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Not here for the pile-on. Just want to highlight the danger @profsamperry @ndrewwhitehead and others have spoken about — when we deploy “Christian nationalism” with such cartoonish imprecision that Americans become desensitized to a real threat. Fwiw in my experience the Venn
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Mentors and coauthors @profsamperry and @ndrewwhitehead show that racialized biblicism increases support for punishing the innocent. 4/4 https://t.co/eSM2eZ0V3A
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My friend & collaborator @Chris_H_Seto with Iman Said show that belief in false narratives pervasive in conservative religious groups about crime in the US accounts for much of the religious association with punitive attitudes. 3/4 https://t.co/amuTd2RekU
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Hell to Pay - Baker and Booth 2016 People who believe that evil spiritual forces perpetuate crime are more supportive of all forms of punishment. 2/4 https://t.co/15Iw8VJy4F
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What we find consistently is that #ChristianNationalism frames complex social problems (e.g. crime) in very simple “spiritual warfare” terms. When you do that, harsh punishment seems more deserved. Here are just a few examples that influenced my research on this: 🧵🪡 1/4
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Rep.Higgins may ask God for forgiveness without reparation as an individual, but his words-typed, reviewed, and posted to an official gov. account-disqualify him from making decisions affecting the lives of Americans. @MikeJohnson knows this, he's just protecting his ally.
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4. Circumventing consequences: "He prayed about it... we move forward, we believe in redemption." Here, the Speaker of the House suggests that accountability is unnecessary. That outright lies about people plagued by bomb threats shouldn't be challenged or atoned for.
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3. Diminishing the impact of racism: "He was approached by colleagues who said it was offensive." It's notable that the objectively racist remarks aren't a problem per se, they're only a problem because some colleagues said it was offensive. So they're the problem, not racism.
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2. "Honesty" is a vibe: "... a very frank and outspoken person..." Johnson implies that statements that are completely false, targeting a group of people who recently received bomb threats, coming from an elected official shouldn't be challenged because he's being frank.
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1. Contrived Ignorance: "I didn't even see it." Rep. Johnson creates space to defend Higgins without owning his words by pretending he wasn't briefed on it prior to this press conference. When a reporter quotes the tweet to him , Rep. Johnson rolls his eyes & doubles-down.
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Here's a breakdown of some of the common strategies he's employing to build a permission structure for Rep. Higgins's words posted to his official government account:
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