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Most Americans see Muslims like any other group after California
shooting - poll
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[December 05, 2015]
By Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Just days after two
Muslims were accused of gunning down 14 people in California, a
Reuters/Ipsos poll shows 51 percent of Americans view Muslims living in
the United States the same as any other community, while 14.6 percent
are generally fearful.
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In the first poll on views of Muslim Americans taken in the
aftermath of the Paris and San Bernardino attacks, much of the
division is partisan. Among Democrats, 60 percent said they view
Muslims like any other community, compared with 30 percent of
Republicans.
How Americans should treat Muslims, both those already living in the
United States and those seeking to come to the country as refugees,
became a divisive topic after Islamic State claimed credit for
killing 130 people in Paris and a Muslim couple is believed to have
slaughtered 14 people and wounded 21 others in California.
Amaney Jamal, a politics professor at Princeton, said it's "healthy"
to see the majority positively viewing Muslims, but cautioned about
growing fears.
“If terrorism is designed to create a larger gap between Muslims and
Westerners, unfortunately they’re succeeding,” Jamal said. “The
threat of terror is going to be fought by Muslims and non-Muslims
together. You would like to see those gaps close so people are
working together and not being fearful.”
Of the 1,056 likely voters across the nation polled online on
Thursday and Friday, 34.7 percent said they are fearful of “a few
groups and individuals” in the Muslim community.
The poll has a credibility interval of 3.4 percentage points for all
Americans and about 5.5 percentage points when looking at just
Republican or Democratic responses.
Republicans were more likely than Democrats to support closely
monitoring mosques (64 percent compared with 43 percent) or closing
ones with suspected extremist ties (69 percent to 48 percent).
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump drew criticism when
he said he would be willing to close mosques where extremists
practiced and that a database of all Muslims should be created.
“There still is very much a political divide in each of these
responses,” said Lori Peek, a sociology professor at Colorado State
and author of the 2011 book “Behind the Backlash: Muslim Americans
After 9/11.” “Democrats and the independents are looking more
similar, and they generally are more tolerant.”
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Many voters said they agree that Muslims are less willing to
assimilate than other immigrant groups.
Peek said numerous studies have found that Muslims are more
successful at integrating into American society -- obtaining
education, voting regularly and living in diverse neighbors -- than
any other immigrant group.
Many Americans said they believe Muslims are more likely to put
their own religion above the law -- a point that echoes critics'
insistence that Islamic sharia law is being forced upon
non-believers. Forty-nine percent said Muslims put religion above
the law, compared with 33 percent who thought the same of Christians
and 23 percents of Jews.
Those polled also expressed disagreement that American Muslims are
doing enough to report possible extremists, with 23 percent saying
they believe that potential risks are being reported.
Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Center for Islamic-American
Relations, said while he is pleased that the majority of Americans
view his religion positively, he is concerned by the continued
minority that holds anti-Islamic views.
“We are seeing I think a more toxic anti-Muslim environment or
atmosphere than we have seen since 9/11,” Hooper said. “In some ways
it’s worse because it’s been mainstreamed by public figures like
Donald Trump or Ben Carson so it’s seen as a natural, normal kind of
thing.”
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson and Chris Kahn; Editing by Lisa
Shumaker)
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