Comparing liberals and conservatives, against climate change, a real phenomenon, or not. Which best describes you?
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| I lean towards conservative, and I believe climate change/global warming is a real phenomenon. | |
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| 84 votes 23% | |
| I lean towards conservative, and I DO NOT believe climate change/global warming is a real phenomenon. | |
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| 69 votes 19% | |
| I lean towards liberal, and I believe climate change/global warming is a real phenomenon. | |
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| 167 votes 46% | |
| I lean towards liberal, and I DO NOT believe climate change/global warming is a real phenomenon. | |
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| 45 votes 12% | |


I'm really interested to see the results of this one, since among my friends (of similar political beliefs) I'm in the minority on this issue.
I'm yet to be persuaded it's happening, but if the knock on effect is to increase the use of sustainable energy sources then at least one good thing has come from all the rhetoric. I do hate how it seems to have pervaded every area of our lives.
I'd say most of my friends would lean towards liberal, with the odd exceptions to right or left. I'd say opinions differ without any political bias, except the few peeps I know who are seriously into the whole NWO theory and I kinda don't listen to them much cos, well, they spit when they talk.
I maintain that this issue is not as politically polarizing as it is made out to be. It tends to get painted as a liberal issue, and I just don't see it. I hope this poll will bear that out.
If my theory is correct, there should be approximately an equal number of green votes as red votes, and likewise about equally as many blue votes as gold votes (or orange or yellow or whatever that is). This would show that just as many believe it as don't, on either side of the political spectrum.
I honestly hadn't considered the point before on a personal level, in terms of politics here it seems to be an issue that all political parties have accepted as true and campaign on. They differ only in the ways they intend to fund countermeasures. I tend to think your theory is true from my own experience, be very interesting to see how the world votes it.
Well, the results seem to indicate, first of all, that more people believe it is a real phenomenon than don't. A large percentage of those identifying as liberal believe it, but surprisingly more conservatives believe it than do not.
That's close enough to what I was thinking, to show this is not a political polarization issue.