Nearly four in 10 U.S. residents blame weather on "end times"
By Mary Wisniewski | Reuters – 1 hr 3 mins ago
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Nearly four in 10 U.S. residents say the severity of recent natural disasters such as Superstorm Sandy is evidence the world is coming to an end, as predicted by the Bible, while more than six in 10 blame it on climate change, according to a poll released on Thursday.
The survey by the Public Religion Research Ins ute in partnership with the Religion News Service found political and religious disagreement on what is behind severe weather, which this year has included extreme heat and drought.
Most Catholics (60 percent) and white non-evangelical Protestants (65 percent) say they believe disasters like hurricanes and floods are the result of climate change.
But nearly two-thirds (65 percent) of white evangelical Protestants say they think the storms are evidence of the "end times" as predicted by the Bible.![]()
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Overall, 36 percent point to end times and 63 percent to climate change.
PRRI research director Daniel Cox said that some respondents - including 75 percent of non-white Protestants - believe extreme weather is both evidence of end times and the result of climate change.
"No one really knows how (end times) would look and how God would bring it about," Cox said.
Politics also color perceptions of the weather, the survey found. More than three-quarters of Democrats and six in 10 independents believe that the weather has become more extreme over the last few years, while less than half of Republicans say they have perceived such a shift.
"Their political leanings are even affecting how they experience weather, which is pretty fascinating," said Cox.
The January-to-November period in the United States this year was the warmest first 11 months of any year on record for the contiguous states. And 2012 will likely surpass 1998 as the warmest year on record for the nation, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
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Most climate scientists believe that the warming trend for the nation and the world is tied to human activity, such as the burning of fossil fuels.
Extreme storms like Sandy, along with more intense droughts, wildfires and floods, are projected by some as the result of climate change, though scientists are reluctant to attribute individual events to global warming.
The PRRI survey found that while there is disagreement about the causes of global warming, there is widespread agreement about the need for action.
Two-thirds of Americans say the U.S. government should do more to address climate change - including most of those who believe global warming is due to natural weather patterns, the survey found.
It also found that 15 percent of Americans believe that the end of the world, as predicted by the New Testament's Book of Revelation, will occur in their lifetime.![]()
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Some 2 percent believe that the end of the world, as predicted by the ancient Mayans, will occur by the end of this year.
Some people who say they believe in end times do not act on that belief in their everyday lives, said Cal Jillson, political science professor at Southern Methodist University.
"I think that's their way of expressing a deep commitment to Biblical literalism," said Jillson. "If you sat down with them and said, 'Do you really think that within the next few years we'll experience the end times?' they probably don't ... . A good number of these people are saving for retirement."
The survey of 1,018 adults was conducted between December 5 and December 9. The margin of error was plus or minus 3 percentage points.
(Reporting By Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Greg McCune and Xavier Briand)
Something like 50%+ "stupidly virtuous" Repugs believe humans were created AS IS in the last 10K years.
Link please.
So...
What do you think of the intelligent design trending, and the fact that so few have the evolution idea?
Something like 41% of the enlightened progressive Democrats believe humans were created AS IS in the last 10k years.![]()
There's no trending. It's static. +/- 10 pts in the last 30+ years.
Shows you how much ground the Republicans could make up if they dropped their racist crap tbh.
nope, in a huge pitch for the LGBT and female vote, Cantor stalls/kills VAWA.
So... Static is not a trend?
I wish you hadn't used this in another thread. I laughed at this particular response, but I would have laughed much harder had you not used it already. Still, this is perfect.
That'll do Boo, that'll do.
Jesus, WC has been boutons level bad lately and then Boo goes and actually does something well. I feel like WC has supplanted B_D.
I don't think even the Talibans would come out with that kinda poll result tbh. Most conservative moslem is about blocking woman in life satisying their penis ego, but when regarding business or science, they're quite progessive by THAT standard.
The results do amaze me, thinking the poll was only among those who go to church or something. There is a 9% to 16% range over the years that people didn't think God had a hand.
religion, and religious hucksters, makes you stupid
But you pull a poll out that has 78% to 87% of the respondents saying either god created man, or used intelligent design on us.
78% to 87% are therefore just stupid
Most people are sheeple, following the flock MINDLESSLY in whatever the other sheeple are doing and thinking.
Does it stand to reason since the lowest number of people in that poll believing in God is 78% and it is as much as 87%, that it is a poll targeting a specific subset of the population? That is is not random?
So it was among stupid people![]()
So you're using a logical fallacy (appeal to popularity) as an argument for god?
So predictable.
how did I not see this
The middle east was the most technologically advanced place in the world before a prophet came along who said math was evil. Islam is just as crippling towards math and science as Christianity is, if not moreso.
I approve of this message.
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