Americans watched in horror. Then, colleagues, friends and family members began pointing out the faces of people they knew, had shared holidays with and, in the midst of a national security crisis, they began reporting them to federal officials.
While the tipsters’ motivations are unknown, Nathaniel Herr, an associate psychology professor at American University in Washington, DC, said it’s likely many felt obliged to do something after the authorities’ call for assistance.
“When the FBI is making a call, it feels like, ‘Here’s a legitimate place that I can finally report this thing that’s been bothering me for a long time,'” Herr told CNN. “I would bet, in many of the reporters’ experience, it was something that had been brewing for a while and now it was like, ‘OK, someone’s asking me for help.'”
‘Choose a side or die’
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