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Politics is seeping into EVERY aspect of our lives and making them worse, study says

Political polarization is seeping into every aspect of U.S. life, dictating how Americans choose their friends, jobs and product brands, and making life worse in the process, a new study finds. Political polarization is having far-reaching impacts on American life, harming consumer welfare and creating challenges for people, the recent study from the Journal of Public Policy & Marketing said. The partisan rancor is making Americans poorer by limiting their job choices, lonelier and more isolated by cutting off friendships, and even less physically healthy, the authors found. And as consumers increasingly demand that the products they buy reflect their political ideology, companies are under more pressure than ever to issue pronouncements on social issues, potentially deepening the infiltration of politics into daily life, the study argues.

Politics is seeping into EVERY aspect of our lives, study says

Politics is seeping into EVERY aspect of our lives, study says Keith Griffith For Dailymail.com © Provided by Daily Mail MailOnline logo Political polarization is seeping into every aspect of U.S. life, dictating how Americans choose their friends, jobs and product brands, and making life worse in the process, a new study finds. Political polarization is having far-reaching impacts on American life, harming consumer welfare and creating challenges for people, the recent study from the Journal of Public Policy & Marketing said. The partisan rancor is making Americans poorer by limiting their job choices, lonelier and more isolated by cutting off friendships, and even less physically healthy, the authors found.

First impression indeed matters on a first date

First impression indeed matters on a first date According to a study, it is possible for people to assess the personality of their potential suitor in a romantic outing, than a casual setting. New Delhi: It may be more difficult to get an accurate first impression of someone on a first date than in a casual setting, research finds. We can generally rely on first-date impressions, though, the research shows. While previous studies have shown that people can form accurate impressions of new acquaintances in platonic settings — like casual conversations with new classmates — the researchers wanted to find out if the same was true for higher-stakes situations like first dates.

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