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Trump can keep National Guard in Los Angeles for now, appeals court rules; Experts warn of normalization of political violence; FL shellfish industry, communities push governor to ban Apalachicola drilling; Utah weighs cost of repealing clean-energy tax credits.

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White House says decision on Iran strikes will come in two weeks. Conservatives in Congress demand answers on former President Biden's mental acuity, and a new lawsuit could change Maryland's primary election process.

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Giant data centers powering artificial intelligence want cheap rural land but some communities are pushing back, Hurricane Helene mobilized a North Carolina town in unexpected ways, and Cherokee potters make ceramics that honor multiple generations.

Does climate change 'perception gap' silence action in Mississippi?

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Friday, May 9, 2025   

New research suggests Mississippians may be experiencing the same climate-change perception gap found across the globe - when people underestimate how much their neighbors share their concerns.

The study published in Nature Climate Change found this pattern holds true in all 125 countries examined, including the United States.

Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, called it a consistent human tendency.

"The average person believes that other people in their own country tend not to worry about climate change that much," he said, "when, in fact, the majority of people in most countries do worry about climate change."

He said that gap in perception has real-world policy implications. In the United States, almost 80% of congressional staffers underestimated their constituents' support for reducing climate pollution, sometimes by more than 50 percentage points.

Leiserowitz said helping more people understand that their own views are not in the minority could unlock a social tipping point that moves leaders to act.

According to a 2024 Gallup survey, most Mississippians see global warming as a serious threat, yet many feel isolated in their concerns - a dynamic that can slow climate action.

Leiserowitz said bridging this divide could unlock progress.

"If your perception is that Republicans are absolutely against climate policy, then many people might then conclude - especially if you're a policymaker - that we shouldn't be taking action," he said, "when, in fact, there's overwhelming support, even among conservative Republicans."

The research says decades of misinformation campaigns to protect fossil-fuel company profits play a big role in perception gaps. However, Leiserowitz said gaps also persist because any two individuals who don't know what the other thinks are likely to avoid topics they believe are controversial - including climate change.

"So that leads neither of us to talk about it," he said. "Well, now expand that to 300 million people, and you can see that we start slipping down this 'spiral of silence.' Nobody talks about it, so nobody talks about it - which means nobody talks about it."

NOAA data show the state has experienced a 42% increase in extreme rainfall since 2000, and agricultural losses from climate-related disasters have topped $2.5 billion since 2020, according to the Mississippi State University Extension.


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