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In June 2018, the disreputable Neon Nettle web site claimed that a new study had come to some interesting conclusions about America's political class: The Neon Nettle article's central claim is false, and was arrived at using flawed logic and downright misrepresentation of the study's actual findings. In fact, the article itself contains disclaimers about the significance of Washington, D.C.'s top spot in the rankings, suggesting that the headline is no more than inaccurate and sensationalist clickbait: Contrast that measure of sobriety further down in the article with the headline Neon Nettle decided on: 99.9% of US Politicians Are Actual Psychopaths, New Study Reveals. In his May 2018 paper (which has not yet been peer-reviewed), Ryan Murphy — an economist and research assistant professor at Southern Methodist University — arrived at an estimate for the prevalence of personality traits consistent with psychopathy in 48 states and Washington, D.C. Murphy used existing 2013 research which employed online personality tests to measure the prevalence of the Big Five personality traits: Extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, and openness to experience. (Interestingly, one of the online tests used in the 2013 research was myPersonality, a Facebook app which in 2018 was revealed to have been involved in the leaking of three million users' personal data.) Using these extrapolated estimates, Murphy came up with a ranking of 48 states and D.C. for the prevalence of traits consistent with psychopathy. Washington, D.C. had the highest prevalence, followed by Connecticut, California, New Jersey, Wyoming and New York. The states with the lowest prevalence of psychopathy, according to Murphy, were West Virginia, Vermont, Tennessee, North Carolina, and New Mexico. You can see the full list below: Murphy did not measure or estimate the prevalence of psychopathy among politicians, so Neon Nettle's claim that the study had revealed that 99.9 percent of politicians are psychopaths is false on its face. Furthermore, Murphy's research involved proxy measures of the prevalence of psychopathy. That is, he extrapolated estimates of the prevalence of certain personality traits consistent with psychopathy, rather than measuring rates of clinical diagnosis. This further undermines Neon Nettle's claim that the study had found 99.9 percent of politicians are actual psychopaths. The paper did mention the fact that existing research has more strongly associated certain occupations with psychopathy than others. Research conducted by the University of Oxford psychologist Kevin Dutton found ten professions with an unusually high proportion of psychopaths: chief executive officers, lawyers, television and radio news anchors and analysts, salespersons, surgeons, journalists, police officers, clergy, chefs, civil servants. While politician is not on that list, elected politicians often emerge from some of the professions listed, such as lawyer, CEO, and civil servant. Dutton has observed elsewhere: And in the paper cited by Neon Nettle, Murphy wrote: The presence of psychopaths in [the] District of Columbia is consistent with the conjecture found in Murphy (2016) that psychopaths are likely to be effective in the political sphere. Another 2012 study codified certain subjective assessments of job performance, such as behavior and responses to crisis situations, among 42 United States presidents, then scored each of them according to several tests for personality traits consistent with psychopathy. It found that, on average, the presidents scored higher than the general population according to one of those metrics, which measured fearlessness and dominance. When it came to other personality traits consistent with psychopathy, there was no difference between the presidents and the general public. There is a basis in the existing research for concluding that politicians are more likely than the general population to possess and display personality traits consistent with psychopathy, such as ruthlessness, fearlessness, persuasiveness, boldness, and so on. However, the prevalence of psychopathic traits among politicians or those involved in politics is still likely to be very low. According to one widely-cited study, an estimated 1.2 percent of the general population possess personality traits consistent with psychopathy. Among business leaders, that prevalence appears to be higher. One study found 3.9 percent of managers displayed psychopathic traits, while another placed that figure at 5.76 percent, and estimated that as many as 10.43 percent of white-collar managers were dysfunctional, meaning psychopathic characteristics were clearly present although not to a degree that would allow a reliable medical diagnosis to be made. It's possible that the prevalence of personality traits consistent with psychopathy might be as high in the world of politics, but despite the claims made by this article, any reliable figures are lacking.
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