“…A large literature examining social identification has consistently shown that individuals are motivated to defend their group to the extent that they identify with it (e.g., (Branscombe, Ellemers, Spears, & Doosje, 1999). Since high identifiers are motivated to uphold a positive ingroup image (Doosje & Branscombe, 2003;Doosje, Branscombe, Spears, & Manstead, 2006), they tend to justify or even deny the wrongfulness of their groups' actions to protect their identity (e.g., Bilali, Tropp, & Dasgupta, 2012;Li, Leidner, & Fernandez-Campos, 2019;Lowery, Knowles, & Unzueta, 2007). Low identifiers, by contrast, tend to be more ingroup critical, experience more group-based guilt, and are therefore more likely to react in a compensatory manner in response to negative portrayals of the ingroup (e.g., Doosje et al, 2006;Klein, Licata, & Pierucci, 2011;Roccas, Klar, & Liviatan, 2006).…”