In February, pollsters at the Public Religion Research Institute asked
Americans about their impressions of discrimination in the United
States. Two religious groups were included on the list of those who
might face bias: Christians and Muslims. Depending on who was answering,
the responses were wildly different.
Overall, people were twice as likely to say Muslims face
discrimination as they were to say the same thing about Christians.
Democrats were four times more likely to see Muslim vs. Christian
discrimination, and non-religious people more than three. White
Catholics and white mainline Protestants were both in line with the
American average: Each group was roughly twice as likely to say Muslims
face discrimination compared to how they see the Christian experience.
The
people who stuck out, whose perceptions were radically different from
others in the survey, were white evangelical Protestants. Among this
group, 57 percent said there’s a lot of discrimination against
Christians in the U.S. today. Only 44 percent said the same thing about
Muslims. They were the only religious group more likely to believe
Christians face discrimination compared to Muslims.
No comments:
Post a Comment