A few days ago I posted on how there are certain topics we can never afford to come to a middle ground on. But here are a few issues Americans want to unite over. The only question is, will our current politicians or administration push these issues? Here is a new survey from the Cultural Research Center.
"According to a new survey by Dr. George Barna, Research Director of the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, despite the ongoing media narrative of an irredeemably divided America, the political “wish list” of Americans of both parties after the election embraces a number of broadly popular policies:
• Increasing U.S. manufacturing jobs.
• Rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure
• Making Social Security and Medicare financially solvent
• Reducing the federal debt
• Reducing federal income taxes for individuals
• Expanding school choice
Incredibly, all of the above policies receive at least two-thirds support from voters for each presidential candidate, and many have the support of even 75 and 80 percent of American voters. These findings provide hope that in the wake of the 2020 election, national unity and post-election healing are possible, especially if the incoming president and other elected officials focus on these consensus issues in 2021."
These are topics most of us want to see. Of course, I never like the words Government and
Social Security and Medicare in the same sentence. Making them financially solvent through government who doesn't handle finances very well as to the rising debt problem, is like a joke to me. But whatever, I can come to a common ground in that area. Here below is more good news on a uniting topic.
"Support for socialism in the United States is at its lowest level in years—with less than a third of all American adults (32%) preferring socialism to capitalism in the wake of the 2020 election—after reaching a peak of 41% of U.S. adults only two years earlier.
The latest findings from the 2020 Post-Election Survey from the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University suggest a sharp and relatively rapid rejection of socialism."
https://www.arizonachristian.edu/culturalresearchcenter/research/
"According to a new survey by Dr. George Barna, Research Director of the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University, despite the ongoing media narrative of an irredeemably divided America, the political “wish list” of Americans of both parties after the election embraces a number of broadly popular policies:
• Increasing U.S. manufacturing jobs.
• Rebuilding the nation’s infrastructure
• Making Social Security and Medicare financially solvent
• Reducing the federal debt
• Reducing federal income taxes for individuals
• Expanding school choice
Incredibly, all of the above policies receive at least two-thirds support from voters for each presidential candidate, and many have the support of even 75 and 80 percent of American voters. These findings provide hope that in the wake of the 2020 election, national unity and post-election healing are possible, especially if the incoming president and other elected officials focus on these consensus issues in 2021."
These are topics most of us want to see. Of course, I never like the words Government and
Social Security and Medicare in the same sentence. Making them financially solvent through government who doesn't handle finances very well as to the rising debt problem, is like a joke to me. But whatever, I can come to a common ground in that area. Here below is more good news on a uniting topic.
"Support for socialism in the United States is at its lowest level in years—with less than a third of all American adults (32%) preferring socialism to capitalism in the wake of the 2020 election—after reaching a peak of 41% of U.S. adults only two years earlier.
The latest findings from the 2020 Post-Election Survey from the Cultural Research Center at Arizona Christian University suggest a sharp and relatively rapid rejection of socialism."
https://www.arizonachristian.edu/culturalresearchcenter/research/
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