“…Consider that experimentally induced COVID threats among White Americans have increased discrimination towards Asians (see Lu et al., 2021; Zhao et al., 2022), whereas a British study (Meleady & Hodson, 2022) tracking naturally occurring changes in COVID‐perceptions over time found that decreases in COVID‐threat coincided with reduced outgroup avoidance (and no changes in anti‐immigrant attitudes). Consider also that, during COVID‐19, RWA (characterized by conventionality, submission to authorities, and punitiveness towards outgroups) decreased in Germany (Heller et al., 2022) but increased in the United States (Pazhoohi & Kingstone, 2021), whereas other American research found little association between political ideology and objective COVID‐related changes (e.g., cases; restrictions) (Stern & Axt, 2022). In a large‐scale comparison of 11 countries, most countries exhibited no relation between ideology and COVID‐reactions except for American respondents, for whom increases in right‐ (vs. left‐) leaning ideologies were associated with greater ignoring of social distancing recommendations (Becher et al., 2021).…”