Just over half of interviewees (51%) in a Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University study, who identified as “people of faith,” responded that they are likely to vote in the presidential election between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. The “people of faith” label is given to those who identify with a recognized religion, such as Christianity, Judaism, Mormonism or Islam.

The study found that approximately 104 million people under the “people of faith” umbrella are not expected to vote this election, including 41 million born-again Christians and 32 million who regularly go to church.

  • @Postmortal_Pop
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    543 months ago

    A Republican rep from Indian wants mixed race marriage to be a state matter. I am white, my partner is Mexican. If he gets what he wants, our relationship will be a crime in at least his state.

    There are no Democrats openly advocating for my marriage to be a crime.

    It seems not all of those snakes aim to kill me.

    • @[email protected]
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      213 months ago

      Yep. Exactly this. I’m white and my wife is black. We live in one of the states where our relationship was a crime just 55 years ago.

      Her grandfather has stories about what happened to people who crossed the race barrier (of course the law only punished minorities for it, not the white partner). We’re not far removed from those horrors and lunatics are already trying to drag us back.

    • @barsquid
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      163 months ago

      People who cannot detect a meaningful difference between the “snakes” in the bag are outrageously privileged.

    • @Vatowine
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      83 months ago

      WHAT IN THE COUNTRY FRIED FUCK AM I READING RN