But what do people who support Trump think about that?
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/06/26/cbo-report-senate-healthcare-bill-drops-number-of-insured-by-22-million/"I couldn't care less how many deadbeats get bumped."
Conservatives
don't care about the figure. Highlighting victims doesn't work because of the "just world fallacy". if you're harmed by something you are a "deadbeat" because that's how "just world fallacy" works. you were harmed, therefore you deserved it. For that reason harping on "22 million uninsured" doesn't actually work to change how a conservative feels about the issue. How psychology actually works is the #1 thing you need to take into account when trying to convince someone that some policy is good or bad. "Just world fallacy" is extremely important to understand when trying to convince people of a different political stripe to believe something, especially if you're a liberal and you're trying to convince a conservative of something.
"Just world fallacy" is not about "you reap what you sow". It kicks in specifically for incidents where some random bad thing happens and there's no rational cause and effect connection. In those cases "just world" believers devalue the person themselves to rationalize why a non-fair outcome happened. e.g. if you describe two guys and one guy gets struck by lightning, then people rationalize negatively about the human worth of the person struck by lightning. It's not a rational process, people devalue other people to explain away unfairness, because then they don't have to process the idea that it could happen to good worthwhile people like themselves.
Another major one that people especially get really wrong is what's called
negative social proof. Claiming "everyone does X. X is bad. Don't do X" is shown to
backfire. People end up believing that X is a normal behavior, and they do it more. They already knew "thing X" was bad, that part isn't news. Telling them that it's *widespread* makes them believe it's more socially acceptable. So they do it more. It's closely linked to the concept of "stereotype threat". e.g. saying "all men are rapists" and labeling just about everything as rape, has the nasty implication that
actual rapists believe that their behavior is
average. They believe "well every other guy does it, why not me?". I don't know, but I have a nasty suspicion that if there
is an actual campus rape epidemic part of it is actually
caused by the omnipresent "everyone's raping everyone" rhetoric normalizing the concept. e.g. ... saying that all these guys are raping girls and getting away with it, perhaps overstating the figures ... what result would you
expect that to have on some impressionable horny teen boy in college? He's
more likely to believe that he can do it and get away with it,
not less likely, and he's more likely to see it as a social norm.