Laz
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 18, 1999
- Messages
- 2,712
Since this was thread was oringinally about poll numbers. I thought everyone should take a look at the results of a Fox News Poll found at http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,188116,00.html.
Here are some excerpts:
"majorities of Americans feel that the Iraqi people are better off today and the United States is safer. Even so, over half say they do not believe a free, stable government can be achieved in Iraq.
More than seven in 10 Americans (74 percent) agree that the United States and the world are safer today without Saddam Hussein in power, including 56 percent that "strongly" agree. These results have remained fairly stable over time and are in line with surveys conducted in 2004 and 2005.
One of the problems with measuring public opinion on Iraq is that attitudes bounce around based on the news it's sort of the media version of the last person they talked to," comments Opinion Dynamics Chairman John Gorman. "One day they see a parliament meeting in a nice shiny hall and things are looking up; they next day they see footage of bombs and bodies. Given how hard it is for people to get a fix on what is really happening, the last image they see is the one that matters the most."
A third of the public (34 percent) is optimistic that there will eventually be a free, stable government in Iraq, while a 55 percent majority disagrees. There are sizable partisan divisions, as a slim 51 percent majority of Republicans think it can be achieved, while a 70 percent majority of Democrats think it cannot.
Again, as on many Iraq-related questions, the views divide along party lines; Republicans (61 percent) are more than twice as likely as Democrats (28 percent) to think the United States is obligated to stay."
Polls can be manipulated to say anything you want them to. It all depends on who you ask, what you ask, and what the pollster wants to report.
Here are some excerpts:
"majorities of Americans feel that the Iraqi people are better off today and the United States is safer. Even so, over half say they do not believe a free, stable government can be achieved in Iraq.
More than seven in 10 Americans (74 percent) agree that the United States and the world are safer today without Saddam Hussein in power, including 56 percent that "strongly" agree. These results have remained fairly stable over time and are in line with surveys conducted in 2004 and 2005.
One of the problems with measuring public opinion on Iraq is that attitudes bounce around based on the news it's sort of the media version of the last person they talked to," comments Opinion Dynamics Chairman John Gorman. "One day they see a parliament meeting in a nice shiny hall and things are looking up; they next day they see footage of bombs and bodies. Given how hard it is for people to get a fix on what is really happening, the last image they see is the one that matters the most."
A third of the public (34 percent) is optimistic that there will eventually be a free, stable government in Iraq, while a 55 percent majority disagrees. There are sizable partisan divisions, as a slim 51 percent majority of Republicans think it can be achieved, while a 70 percent majority of Democrats think it cannot.
Again, as on many Iraq-related questions, the views divide along party lines; Republicans (61 percent) are more than twice as likely as Democrats (28 percent) to think the United States is obligated to stay."
Polls can be manipulated to say anything you want them to. It all depends on who you ask, what you ask, and what the pollster wants to report.