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United States News Title: Poll: 71% of Americans Say Political Correctness Has Silenced Discussions Society Needs to Have, 58% Have Political Views They’re Afraid to Share The Cato 2017 Free Speech and Tolerance Survey, a new national poll of 2,300 U.S. adults, finds that 71% Americans believe that political correctness has silenced important discussions our society needs to have. The consequences are personal58% of Americans believe the political climate prevents them from sharing their own political beliefs. Democrats are unique, however, in that a slim majority (53%) do not feel the need to self-censor. Conversely, strong majorities of Republicans (73%) and independents (58%) say they keep some political beliefs to themselves. Full survey results and report found here. It follows that a solid majority (59%) of Americans think people should be allowed to express unpopular opinions in public, even those deeply offensive to others. On the other hand, 40% think government should prevent hate speech. Despite this, the survey also found Americans willing to censor, regulate, or punish a wide variety of speech and expression they personally find offensive: Americans also cant agree what speech is hateful, offensive, or simply a political opinion: Although Americans oppose (59%) outright bans on public hate speech, that doesnt mean they think hate speech is acceptable. An overwhelming majority (79%) say its morally unacceptable to say offensive things about racial or religious groups. Black, Hispanic, and White Americans Disagree about How Free Speech Operates African Americans and Hispanics are more likely than white Americans to believe: However, black, Hispanic, and white Americans agree that free speech ensures the truth will ultimately prevail (68%, 70%, 66%). Majorities also agree that it would be difficult to ban hate speech since people cant agree what hate speech is (59%, 77%, 87%). Two-Thirds Say Colleges Arent Doing Enough to Teach the Value of Free Speech Two-thirds of Americans (66%) say colleges and universities arent doing enough to teach young Americans today about the value of free speech. When asked which is more important, 65% say colleges should expose students to all types of viewpoints even if they are offensive or biased against certain groups. About a third (34%) say colleges should prohibit offensive speech that is biased against certain groups. But Americans are conflicted. Despite their desire for viewpoint diversity, a slim majority (53%) also agree that colleges have an obligation to protect students from offensive speech and ideas that could create a difficult learning environment. This share rises to 66% among Democrats; 57% of Republicans disagree. 76% Say Students Shutting Down Offensive Speakers Reveals Broader Pattern of How Students Cope More than three-fourths (76%) of Americans say that recent campus protests and cancellations of controversial speakers are part of a broader pattern of how college students deal with offensive ideas. About a quarter (22%) think these protests and shutdowns are simply isolated incidents. However, when asked about specific speakers, about half of Americans with college experience think a wide variety should not be allowed to speak at their college: Nevertheless, few endorse shutting down speakers by shouting loudly (4%) or forcing the speaker off the stage (3%). Current college and graduate students arent much different; only about 7% support forcibly shutting down offensive speakers. 65% Say Colleges Should Discipline Students Who Shut Down Invited Campus Speakers Two-thirds (65%) say colleges need to discipline students who disrupt invited speakers and prevent them from speaking. However, the public is divided about how: 46% want to give students a warning, 31% want the incident noted on the students academic record, 22% want them to pay a fine, 20% want to suspend them, 19% favor arresting the students, 13% want to fully expel the students. Three-fourths (75%) of Republicans support some form of punishment for these students, compared to 42% of Democrats. People of Color Dont Find Most Microaggressions Offensive The survey finds that many microaggressions colleges and universities advise faculty and students to avoid arent considered offensive by most people of color. The percentage of African Americans and Latinos who say these microaggressions are not offensive are as follows: The one microaggression that African Americans (68%) agree is offensive is telling a racial minority you are a credit to your race. Americans Dont Think Colleges Need to Advise Students on Halloween Costumes Nearly two-thirds (65%) say colleges shouldnt advise students about offensive Halloween costumes and should instead let students work it out on their own. A third (33%) think it is the responsibility of the university to remind students not to wear costumes that stereotype racial or ethnic groups at off-campus parties. 20% of Current Students Say College Faculty Has Balanced Mix of Political Views Only 20% of current college and graduate students believe their college or university faculty has a balanced mix of political views. A plurality (39%) say most college and university professors are liberal, 27% believe most are politically moderate, and 12% believe most are conservative. Democratic and Republican students see their college campuses differently. A majority (59%) of Republican college students believe that most faculty members are liberal. In contrast, only 35% of Democratic college students agree most professors are liberal. What Beliefs Should Get People Fired? Americans tend to oppose firing people for their beliefs. Nevertheless, Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say a business executive should be fired if she or he believes transgender people have a mental disorder (44% vs 14%), that homosexuality is a sin (32% vs 10%), and that psychological differences help explain why there are more male than female engineers (34% vs. 14%). Conversely, Republicans are more likely than Democrats to say a business executive should be fired if they burned the American flag at a weekend political protest (54% vs. 38%). Republicans Say Journalists Are an Enemy of the American People A majority (63%) of Republicans agree with President Trump that journalists today are an enemy of the American people. Conversely, most Americans (64%), as well as 89% of Democrats and 61% of independents, do not view journalists as the enemy. These results arent surprising given that most Americans believe many major news outlets have a liberal bias, including The New York Times (52%), CNN (50%), and MSNBC (59%). Fox is the one news station in which a majority (56%) believe it has a conservative bias. Democrats, however, believe most major news organizations are balanced in their reporting including The New York Times (55%), CNN (55%), and CBS (72%). A plurality (44%) also believe the Wall Street Journal is balanced. The two exceptions are that a plurality (47%) believe MSNBC has a liberal tilt and a strong majority (71%) say Fox has a conservative bias. Republicans, on the other hand, see things differently. Overwhelming majorities believe liberal bias colors reporting at The New York Times (80%), CNN (81%), CBS (73%), and MSNBC (80%). A plurality also feel the Wall Street Journal (48%) has a liberal bias. One exception is that a plurality (44%) believe Fox News has a conservative bias, while 41% believe it provides unbiased reporting. Despite perceptions of bias, only 29% of the public want the government to prevent media outlets from publishing a story that government officials say is biased or inaccurate. Instead, a strong majority (70%) say government should not have the power to stop such news stories. Americans Say Wedding Businesses Should Be Required to Serve LGBT People, Not Weddings Few support punishing wedding businesses who refuse service to same-sex weddings. Two-thirds (66%) say nothing should happen to a bakery which refuses to bake a cake for a same-sex wedding. A fifth (20%) would boycott the bakery, another 22% think government should sanction the bakery in some way, such as fining the bakery (12%), requiring an apology (10%), issuing a warning (8%), taking away their business license (6%), or sending the baker to jail (1%). Clinton Voters Cant Be Friends with Trump Voters Nearly two-thirds (61%) of Hillary Clintons voters agree that its hard to be friends with Donald Trumps voters. However, only 34% of Trumps voters feel the same way about Clintons. Instead, nearly two-thirds (64%) of Trump voters dont think its hard to be friends with Clinton voters. Sign up here to receive forthcoming Cato Institute survey reports The Cato Institute 2017 Free Speech and Tolerance Survey was designed and conducted by the Cato Institute in collaboration with YouGov. YouGov collected responses online August 15-23, 2017 from a national sample of 2,300 Americans 18 years of age and older. The margin of error for the survey is +/- 3.00 percentage points at the 95% level of confidence. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: cranky (#0)
Which means that you can't trust the polls at all unless they are asking completely uninteresting questions. It does explain how the polls are so badly wrong and why we shouldn't take them seriously. People are just lying to these pollsters, I think. They don't trust that those opinions will not be recorded and come back to haunt them later.
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