Thanks to learned scientists, I've discovered that I suffer from a mental problem afflicting millions of Americans.
It's not really a disease. It's more like a peculiarity, one that irritates polite society yet may be corrected with surgery to the frontal lobe. What is this deviancy?
Conservatism.
For many years now, conservatives have secretly feared the day when science would identify us as aberrant, or to use the vernacular, abby-normal.
Sadly, that time has come, in the pages of the liberal-leaning but well-written Mother Jones magazine, and a story about yet another attempt by scientists to chronicle the pathology of conservatism.
According to research from professor John Hibbing at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, conservatives and liberals react differently to certain stimuli. Hibbing and his team have determined that conservatives dwell on negatives and have a stronger "disgust sensitivity" than do liberals.
This problem, researchers believe, could be genetic.
"So, if you have a negativity bias, and you focus more on the aversive and disgusting, then the world seems more threatening to you," says the Mother Jones piece. "And thus, policies like supporting a stronger military, or being tougher on immigration, might feel very natural."