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Big shocks drive populism on Twitter

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Using data of more than 178,000 Twitter users in Germany, the authors show that unprecedented terrorist attacks and major crime events shift the language of peoples’ tweets closer to that of the German far-right party MUMBAI : As Covid-19 spreads across countries, so have xenophobic sentiments.

Several reports of racist attacks directed at Asians have emerged in the West. In several cities in India, people from the northeastern part of the country have faced attacks.

These attacks may be temporary and could die down over time but unanticipated threats, particularly those linked to other races, often trigger xenophobic populism among people, a new National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) research authored by Francesco Giavazzi and

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Trucker convoy: Kids in 25% of vehicles could ‘complicate’ response, cops say
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