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The worse you are at finding Ukraine on a map, the likelier you are to want to bomb it

The worse people were at locating Ukraine on a map the more they wanted to intervene militarily.
The worse people were at locating Ukraine on a map the more they wanted to intervene militarily.
Thomas Zeitzoff/The Monkey Cage

Political scientists Kyle Dropp, Joshua Kertzer, and Thomas Zeitzoff asked 2,066 Americans to find Ukraine on a map. Then they asked what the US should do in Ukraine. "We wanted to see where Americans think Ukraine is and to learn if this knowledge (or lack thereof) is related to their foreign policy views," they wrote at The Monkey Cage.

It was. The less likely Americans are to know where Ukraine is on a map, the more likely they are to want to bomb it.

The study isn't able to show why cartography skills diminish enthusiasm for going to war with Russia. But I have a hunch: it's much easier to solve problems that you know nothing about.

I began writing about politics in college. And I started out with a huge advantage: I knew so little about anything that I could confidently comment on everything. It's all been downhill since. The study of policy is basically the study of why it's so difficult to solve any problems.

The Ukraine crisis is easy to solve so long as all you know is that Ukraine is a small country and the United States is a very, very big country with a very, very powerful military. It's harder to solve when you realize it borders Russia. It's even harder to solve when you realize that many of the people in Crimea want Russia to be in control. It's even harder to solve when you realize Russia could strike back at us by accelerating Iran's nuclear program.

Ignorance isn't just bliss. It's confidence.

Of course, diving deep into a polarizing subject like Ukraine can come with its own problems...