Here is a new paper of mine (12 pages) on suspicious agreement between belief and values. The idea is that if your empirical beliefs systematically support your values, then that is evidence that you arrived at those beliefs through a biased belief-forming process. This is especially so if those beliefs concern propositions which aren’t probabilistically correlated with each other, I argue.
I have previously written several LW posts on these kinds of arguments (here and here; see also mine and ClearerThinking’s political bias test) but here the analysis is more thorough. See also Thrasymachus' recent post on the same theme.
Is that a falsifiable statement and do you have support for it?
By introspection this is false for me, but then I'm not "most people". However by the same token I would be wary of sweeping generalisations about "most people".
If someone told me "all my (political) enemies are the same, no significant difference between them", I would probably consider that person pretty stupid.
Starting with all those people whose definition of "right-wing" is so wide that it includes even Bernie Sanders...