How do muslims vote in America?
Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2012 3:34 pm
I see poll numbers for Catholics, Jews, Hispanics, Jesus freaks, atheists, niggers and other christians but never ragheaded muslims. Why not????
"...overflowing with foulmouthed ignorance."
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Probably because they represent about half a percentage of the voting population. Jews are the second smallest group in your illustrious list and are well over double the number of Muslims.Andy79 wrote:I see poll numbers for Catholics, Jews, Hispanics, Jesus freaks, atheists, niggers and other christians but never ragheaded muslims. Why not????
http://www.modbee.com/2012/09/27/239242 ... pport.htmlAndy79 wrote:They'll vote for Obama. Obama panders hard for that vote. But how come no polls reported on for 2012??
The survey of 400 likely voters found that 52 percent of Arab Americans intend to vote for Obama; 28 percent said they plan to vote for Romney.
Read more here: http://www.modbee.com/2012/09/27/239242 ... rylink=cpy
About 26 percent of Muslim-Americans don’t see themselves as part of any party, said Karma Dana, an associate at the Center for American Political Studies and the Department of Government at Harvard University. Dana co-led a survey of Muslims with Matt A. Barreto, an associate professor at the University of Washington.
A Pew Research Center survey in 2011 found that 19 percent of Muslim voters were Independent or had no party preference, and 70 percent affiliated with the Democratic Party or were Democratic leaning.
Muslims in the U.S. haven’t always leaned Democratic. Before 9/11 and the Bush administration, many Muslim-Americans were Republican voters, Dana said.
Despite Muslims’ disappointment in Obama’s position, most of the Republican presidential contenders don’t offer much solace.
There's a few problems with this:kreator wrote:http://www.modbee.com/2012/09/27/239242 ... pport.htmlAndy79 wrote:They'll vote for Obama. Obama panders hard for that vote. But how come no polls reported on for 2012??The survey of 400 likely voters found that 52 percent of Arab Americans intend to vote for Obama; 28 percent said they plan to vote for Romney.
Read more here: http://www.modbee.com/2012/09/27/239242 ... rylink=cpy
Not that unusual. Why would they want to vote for a party that hates them?
Thats a good post. Thanks Turd!There's a few problems with this:
1. Arab does not equal Muslim-- there is a very large Christian Arab population in the US. It's a lot like lumping African-American and African together.
2. Many, if not most, American Muslims are not Arabs.
3. Muslims, in my experience, are usually a lot more politically sophisticated than they are believed to be by Americans, and their concerns are generally not effectively covered by or even addressed by pollsters.
4. Many Muslims are very politically and religiously conservative. These beliefs are more in line with the GOP position than the Democratic one-- whether or not this translates into voting GOP is not something that any analysis I've seen covers though.
5. Many Muslims live in heavily Democratic areas like NoVA and Michigan-- whether or not their votes matter/ how they matter is unknown. NoVA has pretty unique political concerns, so it's hard to lump them in with any other area outside of Southern MD.
I mentioned this above...Turdacious wrote: There's a few problems with this:
2. Many, if not most, American Muslims are not Arabs.
http://www.meforum.org/13/how-did-muslims-vote-in-2000Turdacious wrote: 4. Many Muslims are very religiously conservative/traditional. These beliefs are more in line with the GOP position than the Democratic one-- whether or not this translates into voting GOP is not something that any analysis I've seen covers effectively.
That study has a lot of flaws unfortunately. It doesn't differentiate between blacks who are more (at least culturally) affiliated with the older forms of Islam and Black Muslims. Very different religions. Moreover, it is heavily (as you'll notice as you look at the people and organizations they quote) arab-centric.kreator wrote: http://www.meforum.org/13/how-did-muslims-vote-in-2000
Muslims overwhelmingly supported Bush in 2000, but barely registered any votes for McCain in 2008. Wonder why.
IMO, oversimplifying the importance of Israel issue is not a way to understand Muslim views, it is an Arab-centric perspective. I am not suggesting or implying that Muslims are Republicans-- I genuinely have no idea how they vote, but I suspect that the correlations between age and education are similar to those of white Americans.kreator wrote:While your points above are correct, it doesn't stop the American warhawks from using the terms Arabs and Muslims interchangably or for sharing their fear/hatred equally.
And frankly even though a large percentage of Arab Americans aren't Muslim, they still sure as heck don't want to see their homelands destroyed by shells supported by America and Israel.
I'm assuming you're talking about African-American versions of Islam vs. Africans who come to America (still African-Americans) and retain a mainstream version of Islam?Turdacious wrote: That study has a lot of flaws unfortunately. It doesn't differentiate between blacks who are more (at least culturally) affiliated with the older forms of Islam and Black Muslims. Very different religions. Moreover, it is heavily (as you'll notice as you look at the people and organizations they quote) arab-centric.
IMO, oversimplifying the importance of Israel issue is not a way to understand Muslim views, it is an Arab-centric perspective. I am not suggesting or implying that Muslims are Republicans-- I genuinely have no idea how they vote, but I suspect that the correlations between age and education are similar to those of white Americans.[/quote]kreator wrote:While your points above are correct, it doesn't stop the American warhawks from using the terms Arabs and Muslims interchangably or for sharing their fear/hatred equally.
And frankly even though a large percentage of Arab Americans aren't Muslim, they still sure as heck don't want to see their homelands destroyed by shells supported by America and Israel.
Yes it's Arab centric, but the well-being of the Arab world has an effect on the entire Muslim world. Arabic is an essential part of the Muslim faith. I can promise you that even Turks and Indonesians, while they may not be Arab, don't want to see an American President in office who will bring war to the Arab world.Turdacious wrote:IMO, oversimplifying the importance of Israel issue is not a way to understand Muslim views, it is an Arab-centric perspective.
Andy79 wrote:I think the kreator will vote for the Obumbler.
A lot of Muslims don't like the:kreator wrote:Yes it's Arab centric, but the well-being of the Arab world has an effect on the entire Muslim world. Arabic is an essential part of the Muslim faith. I can promise you that even Turks and Indonesians, while they may not be Arab, don't want to see an American President in office who will bring war to the Arab world.