Bei Veteranen ist die Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass sie politische Gewalt unterstützen, nicht größer als bei der breiten Öffentlichkeit. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass Veteranen, die sich an extremistischer Gewalt beteiligen, aufgrund ihrer Ausbildung zwar eine besondere Bedrohung darstellen, weit verbreitete extremistische Einstellungen unter Militärangehörigen jedoch relativ selten zu sein scheinen.

Veterans are no more likely than the general public to support political violence

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7 Kommentare

  1. InsaneSnow45 on

    >A recent [study](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40621-025-00626-5) published in the journal Injury Epidemiology provides evidence that military service and combat experience do not broadly increase support for political violence or right-wing extremism. The findings suggest that while veterans who engage in extremist violence pose specific threats due to their training, widespread extremist attitudes among military members appear to be relatively rare.

    >“The January 6 insurrection raised questions about whether people with military experience are disproportionately involved in political violence,” said study author Elizabeth A. Tomsich, a researcher at the Centers for Violence Prevention at UC Davis.

    >“While reports indicated that veterans were overrepresented among those charged, limited research has examined links between military service and support for or willingness to engage in political violence. We conducted this study to better understand whether military service and combat experience are associated with support for or willingness to engage in political violence, agreement with extremist views, or approval of extremist groups or movements.”

    >Some experts have proposed that the psychological processes involved in military training, such as desensitization to violence and intense group solidarity, might make some veterans susceptible to extremist recruitment. At the same time, the loss of community and purpose during the difficult transition back to civilian life could pull some individuals toward radical organizations. However, prior surveys examining the endorsement of political violence among the general veteran population have yielded mixed and sometimes contradictory results.

    >The researchers wanted to clarify whether military service or combat experience acts as a widespread risk factor for supporting political violence or extremist organizations. They sought to measure personal willingness to engage in such violence and approval of various extremist movements. By surveying a large, nationally representative sample, they hoped to provide a clearer picture of political militancy within the armed forces.

  2. mattronimus007 on

    This seems like common sense to me. I honestly don’t understand the reason for the study or why it’s presented as surprising… most veterans I’ve met have become disillusioned with politics and don’t trust either party because they’ve seen inside the machine.

  3. theamazingstickman on

    Most of the veterans I know have seen enough violence and death and laugh at others thinking it’s easy. They have no interest in it here or even overseas.

  4. babymanateesmatter on

    The military is, objectively, an institution of political violence. I don’t think that’s bad, it’s neutral actually, it’s just funny how we’re conditioned to think of acceptable political violence as not political violence. 

  5. That seems logical. Most people enlist into the military due to them being from a deprivileged socioeconomic background. I would imagine that these people are even less likely than the average person to partake in any type of political violence.

    But of course, you also have a small group of people with psychotic, violent traits that enlist because they wish to kill. I would guess that those are the minority that partake in extremist violence.

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