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Old 02-19-2007, 07:10 AM
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It's Official. AP says 'majority' of muslimes want peace

The Associated Press is an association of press people. Anywho, they (AP) rounded up 5 whole thousand muslimes out of the world's 1.79 billion and asked them if peace was possible.

They didn't ask the remaining 1,789,995,000 muslimes what they thought.

Just a perspective of how many muslimes exist and how many they polled:
If every muslime moved into the US and evenly populated our land, we would see 511 of 'em living in every square mile of these United States. If everyone living in the US were to evenly spread out, there would be only 85 people per square mile.

The AP's silly little poll represents one muslime polled in every 700 square miles; or 1 muslime polled for every 357,699 not polled.

Quote:
Poll: Muslim, West conflict not inevitable

By D'arcy Doran

The Associated Press
Grand Prairie

LONDON - A majority of people around the world do not believe the world is locked in a "clash of civilizations" that will lead to violent conflict between Islam and the West, according to findings of a poll published Monday.

The British Broadcasting Corp. World Service poll of more than 28,000 people found that 56 percent of respondents believed "common ground can be found" between Muslims and Westerners, while only 28 percent said violence was inevitable.

The survey also found that 52 percent of people believed that tensions between Muslims and Westerners were caused by political power and interests, compared to 29 percent who said religion and culture were to blame.

The poll was conducted for the BBC by the international polling firm GlobeScan and the Program on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland.

Pollsters questioned about 1,000 people in 27 different countries, including the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Russia, China, India, Brazil, Mexico and Australia; as well as four predominantly Muslim countries: Egypt, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and Indonesia; and two countries with large Muslim populations: Lebanon and Nigeria.

The respondents were interviewed in person and over the phone from November to mid-January. The margin of error ranges from 2.5 percent to 4 percent, depending on the country.

Since the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, countries around the world have struggled with how to deal with Islamic radicalism at home and abroad. The poll's results are hopeful, given they show most people believe differences between Muslims and Westerners can be worked out, said Steven Kull, director of PIPA at the University of Maryland.

"Most people around the world clearly reject the idea that Islam and the West are caught in an inevitable clash of civilizations," he said.

Fifty-eight percent of respondents blamed tensions on intolerant minorities - not cultural groups as a whole. But 26 percent identified fundamental differences between the cultures as the root cause.

In Britain, 77 percent of people believed common ground could be found between Muslims and Westerners, compared to 15 percent who saw violence as inevitable. In the U.S., 64 percent believed in common ground, but 31 percent saw conflict as inevitable.

Overall, 52 percent of the 5,000 Muslims surveyed said common ground was possible, including majorities in Lebanon (68 percent) and Egypt (54 percent), as well as pluralities in Turkey (49 percent) and the United Arab Emirates (47 percent).

Only in Indonesia did a majority (51 percent) believe that violence was inevitable.

Worldwide, Muslims were slightly more certain than Christians that tensions derive from political conflict, at 55 percent compared to 51 percent.

02/19/2007; 02:39:42 AM
Once again, the HutchNews shows her colors.
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