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Poll: Anti-Muslim Sentiment Grew After Bin Laden Death

Anti Muslim Sentiment Bin Laden

First Posted: 07/23/11 10:28 AM ET Updated: 09/22/11 06:12 AM ET

By Omar Sacirbey
c. 2011 Religion News Service

(RNS) Many Muslim Americans had hoped that the death of Osama bin Laden would improve their image among other Americans, but according to a new survey, just the opposite has happened.

Rather than being mollified, anti-Muslim sentiment has intensified since Navy Seals killed the al-Qaida leader in a May 1 raid in Pakistan, according to a new report by researchers from the Ohio State University School of Communication, Cornell University's Survey Research Institute, and the University of New Hampshire Survey Center.

In the weeks before bin Laden's death, nearly half of respondents described Muslim Americans as "trustworthy" and "peaceful," researchers said. After bin Laden's death, that figure dropped to one-third of respondents.

For Muslims, perhaps the most troublesome finding was that these negative shifts had occurred among political liberals and moderates, a constituency that had been seen as the most sympathetic to Muslims after the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Conservatives have been the least likely group to support Muslims. Robert Jones, CEO of the Washington-based Public Religion Research Institute, noted last month that while overall favorable views about Muslims had dropped from 41 to 30 percent since 2005, most of that erosion of support was among conservatives.

Researchers attributed the rise in negative views about Muslims to wall-to-wall media coverage that accompanied bin Laden's death that focused on terrorism, bin Laden's religious views, and the role of Muslim-majority Pakistan in sheltering bin Laden.

"The frenzy of media coverage reminded people of terrorism and the Sept. 11 attacks," Ohio State researcher Erik Nisbet said, "and it primed them to think about Islam in terms of terrorism."

Salam Al-Marayati of the Muslim Public Affairs Council, a Muslim advocacy group in Los Angeles, agreed the media contributed to negative images of Muslims, but said Muslim Americans need to do a better job answering questions about their religion.

"The average American can't distinguish what Pakistan does from what the average American Muslim thinks," Al-Marayati said.

The poll was based on 500 interviews between April 7 and May 1 (when bin Laden was killed) and another 341 interviews between May 2 and May 24. The number of respondents who said Muslims living in America "increased the likelihood of a terrorist attack" rose from 27 percent before May 1 to 34 percent after.

The survey also said the number of respondents unwilling to have a Muslim as a close friend rose from 9 to 20 percent; people who agreed that Muslims are supportive of the United States declined from 62 to 52 percent; and the percentage of liberals who said Muslims made America more dangerous tripled, from 8 to 24 percent.

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By Omar Sacirbey c. 2011 Religion News Service (RNS) Many Muslim Americans had hoped that the death of Osama bin Laden would improve their image among other Americans, but according to a new surve...
By Omar Sacirbey c. 2011 Religion News Service (RNS) Many Muslim Americans had hoped that the death of Osama bin Laden would improve their image among other Americans, but according to a new surve...
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FaceTheTruth00
I'm a girl.
10:34 AM on 07/26/2011
Well, considering the fact that our "ally" Pakistan knew were bin Laden was -- probably for years -- and didn't bother letting us know, while we were losing thousands of soldiers in Afghanistan -- yeah, gee, I wonder why some people might not have a real favorable view after that.

Again, this goes to the silent majority. If more muslims would stand up against radical terrorists, then maybe people would not lump them all together; no matter how unfairly.

Here we are with our "good buddies" Pakistan, seeking out and taking down terrorists, while trying to neutralize Al Qaede, only to find out our "good buddy" knew exactly where he was, and kept it from us while accepting billions of dollars in aid and military technology from us.
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Yasser Yousufi
Parthian
02:19 PM on 07/25/2011
So this guy was a Free Mason too? Why don't we try to learn mo about this shady organization? I read Rupert Murdoch is Freemason too so was George Washington! Who are these people? How d they control this world? Here's a list of some well known Freemasons;

http://www.illuminati-news.com/famous-freemasons.htm

Its scary! Basically all our thought processes and actions are framed by Freemasons and we aren't even aware of it.

People should really check out this video of George Marlin speaking prophetically about the issues of today back in 1991

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3r0VnqXu-vg&feature=related
02:00 PM on 07/25/2011
This article was reposted on religiousfreedomusa.org
08:36 AM on 07/25/2011
Yes, i agree but 9/11 is not only responsible for it. The root cause is something else and the problem is not Islam, but the followers of it like it is for any other religion.
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taoistpunk
because the monks wouldn't have me..
12:51 PM on 07/24/2011
After a week long, all out, media blitz with many negative connotations for the abstract, “Muslims,” about one in ten people had changed their mind enough, about that abstraction, to change their answers on a survey. (Exact same survey questions? Exact same polling demographic?) Give it a year and I’d be surprised if the numbers weren’t back to where they started.

Remove the abstract and a very different picture will emerge:
Percentage of people, like myself, who have Muslim friends/acquaintances who are now less likely to have Muslim friends: 0
That think the people we know are somehow more dangerous now: 0

People are reactionary, but we already knew that.
If this study actually tells us anything, it has more to do with our media coverage than the state of the nation, but it’s going to take a lot more than another survey to figure out what it is saying.
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eddy joe
welcome to the machine
07:31 AM on 07/24/2011
"The average American can't distinguish what Pakistan does from what the average American Muslim thinks," Al-Marayati said.
Or maybe the average american is more perceptive than Al-Marayati knows. Do people always mean what they say, or is there a secret bond, in their heart? I don't know the answer to that, but I don't think he does either.
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alkh3myst
Of course you can pay me in gum!
08:27 AM on 08/03/2011
Aw shucks, you guessed it! Yeah, we all do have a secret bond. I let Osama hide in my bedroom closet for years. We dug a tunnel to Pakistan, so he could commute to work. He told me: "You're an American Muslim who served in the military, nobody would ever guess I'm right here in the US", and he was right. Brilliant man. 'Scuse me, I have to go the Death to America Rally and Halal Bar-B-Q now. One last thing. Do you bowl? We have a league. Some of the Mullahs like to take their turbans, and roll them down the lanes. They're such cut-ups! So, next Saturday good? You can be captain of the "Great Satans". Been nice talking to you, infidel...uh I mean 'eddy joe'. Make sure you have your Jizya...I mean "dues" Saturday, okay?
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bsultan
Universal truth is not measured in mass appeal.
05:46 AM on 07/24/2011
When Muslim extremist groups unjustly attack another nation (9/11), it's terrorism. When the US and it's allies unjustly attack another nation (Iraq), it's liberation. I guess if they had the terrorist groups had the means to launch wars then they wouldn't be so bad right?
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08:29 AM on 08/03/2011
I guess if they had the terrorist groups had the means to launch wars then they wouldn't be so bad right?”
================

The Saudi government doesn't agree. Bin Laden offered the services of his group to repel the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, but the Saudis chose to align with the alliance of many nations' regulated armed forces.

The Saudis must have seen some negative quality in Al Qaeda that you miss. Maybe the difference between terrorism and warfare.
11:40 PM on 07/23/2011
http://www.actup.org/forum/content/media-criticized-silence-over-islamic-gay-bashing-amsterdam-2110/

Ezra Levant, a leading Canadian political activist, lawyer and blogger, writes in the Toronto Sun: “If you think Amsterdam is the gay capital of Europe, you’re half-right, but 10 years out of date. Today it’s the gay-bashing capital of Europe.”

The city isn’t just gay now, he says: it’s “Muslim, too,” and “sharia law rules the streets.”

Gay bashing, he writes, is front-page news “only when it’s committed by a straight, white male.”

Levant makes the point that media are reluctant to write about minorities when they’re attacking other minorities. As a parallel phenomenon, he cites Canadian feminists, who, he says, are similarly reluctant to criticize so-called honour killings of Muslim girls.

He says Muslim violence against gays is not a back-alley thing any more: it’s brazen and it’s in daylight.

He writes:

In 2008, 10 Muslim youths broke into a fashion show, dragged gay model Michael du Pree off the stage and beat him bloody. Last month, several lesbians were hit by beer bottles thrown at their heads as they marched in a parade of thousands to protest violence against gays. There’s a gay community centre in Amsterdam – you’d think that would be safe. Wrong. It’s a target, with home-invasion style beatings. No one is immune. Last year Hugo Braakhuis, the founder of Amdsterdam’s gay pride parade, was attacked.
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Joe Goforth
contempt for the status quo
11:25 PM on 07/23/2011
There are terrorist attacks daily in the world and the vast majority are unfortunately carried out in the name if Islam. Can you honestly wonder why Islam is held in suspicion by non-believers? I think it's more a matter of fight or flight instincts than than a public image problem. When bombs are going off you have to run or fight. The horrible side effect of this problem is more violence. I'm equally worried about right wing terrorists regardless of religion or ideology. Society is cracking at the seams.
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Mustafa Aziz
03:00 AM on 07/24/2011
where is your evidence? the vast majority of terrorist attacks are in fact not carried out by muslims. the game is in the identification of such attacks as terrorism or not. the links provided contain links to the fbi and europol reports being discussed.

http://www.loonwatch.com/2010/01/terrorism-in-europe/

http://www.loonwatch.com/2010/01/not-all-terrorists-are-muslims/
08:46 AM on 07/24/2011
Mustafa, that is a great point. The terrorist attack in Oslo, yesterday, was from a Christian right-wing extremist. He does not represent Christianity any more than Osama Bin Laden represents Islam. The fact is that there are extremists in all religions. Joseph Stalin was an Atheist and he was responsible for 20 million deaths. He does not represent Atheism, either.
10:45 PM on 07/23/2011
It seems our country is getting too ripe for a very scary and violent fascist movement. I stand confounded by these numbers. Only 1/3rd?! It's rediculous a few bad apples can cause an intelligent animal species to generalize their horrible behavior toward millions and millions of other people from all kinds of cultures and ethnicities but happening to share the same religion. Add to that all the hatred in general being found today, will reasonable American people stand up against atrocities should that horrible period come? I fear the answer to that question.
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jambi77
swordfish
10:01 PM on 07/23/2011
Be in the news business and try criticizing the jews....see how far that gets you
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hollace
I told you I was sick
09:03 PM on 07/23/2011
If it did , it only grew in people who were already programmed to hate. If it wasn't the Muslims it would have to have been Blacks, Chinese, Gays, Mexicans, Russians ...or how about the Peurto Ricans and the Japanese, people from Pakistan and people from ...well...name a time...stick your finger on the map. It would be easier to name the few Groups and the Few Countries that haven't been the target of dehumanizing in order to target. Patheitic Right Wing ...racing to the bottom.
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kooldalai
There is no spoon
09:40 PM on 07/23/2011
First post I read and I do';t think I need to read further, well said....Fanned!
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Theophrastus
OK, ok... so maybe I'm not "human" per se...
08:42 PM on 07/23/2011
Muslims are just Christians with thicker beards and no access to porn.
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hollace
I told you I was sick
09:04 PM on 07/23/2011
Extremists all have one thing in common. Each other.
10:46 PM on 07/23/2011
You're saying Muslims and Christians are extremists? Hmmm...
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Joe Goforth
contempt for the status quo
11:27 PM on 07/23/2011
Osama seemed to have a stash of porn when the got him.
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Mustafa Aziz
03:01 AM on 07/24/2011
blatant propaganda...hopefully people are more savvy than this.
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eddy joe
welcome to the machine
07:34 AM on 07/24/2011
It made him seem more human, to me.
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SteveSFM
politically incorrect left-winger
07:27 PM on 07/23/2011
People should be judged as individuals and as member of SMALLER groups. For example, if someone is a member of al Qaeda or the KKK, it's a good bet that person is a violent thug. If all you know about someone is that s/he is a Muslim or a Christian, you can't really make a judgement about what kind of person that is.

There. I've just solved bigotry. ;-)
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kooldalai
There is no spoon
09:49 PM on 07/23/2011
Great point! I have thought the same, and people should realize that we have extemists all over and we cannot generalize the bad behavior of just a few.
12:01 AM on 07/26/2011
Kool dalai.. Haha.. You will put a iPod on him to make him kool.
10:47 PM on 07/23/2011
Amen. Why is something that a first grader could understand so difficult for intelligent adults?
07:11 PM on 07/23/2011
The US has to have an enemy in order to provide cohesion for the country. With the Soviets gone, it was going to be China until 911 when the Islamic world turned into the obvious target. Muslims will have to wait until a new enemy comes along before they will get any rest.