“…Studies show that media reports have played a promoting and polarizing role (Han and Wackman, 2017;Wojcieszak et al, 2017) on topics including immigration and border control policies (Van Klingeren et al, 2017;Wenzel and Żerkowska-Balas, 2019), ethnic and religious identity (Shaver et al, 2017;Fang et al, 2019), climate politics (Thaker et al, 2017;Rhomberg et al, 2018), the Euro crisis (Rothmund et al, 2017), populism (Muller et al, 2017), bill amendments (Melenhorst, 2015), protest movements (Jost et al, 2018), and electoral politics (Neiheisel, 2016). Even the Roman Catholic Pope has learned to use social media to address political problems (Genovese, 2019). Moreover, large tech companies such as Google, Facebook, and Amazon, which have a vast consumer base, are believed to be capable of manipulating the public's emotions, promoting certain ideological positions, and influencing people's behavior (Langlois and Elmer, 2019).…”