not as dumb as we (so often) seem

Beliefs About Climate Change Hold Steady
Poll Shows Most

Americans Doubt Hurricanes Are Linked to Global Warming
By Richard Morin, Washington Post Staff Writer

A majority of Americans

believe Earth’s atmosphere is heating up, but they doubt that global warming is to blame for the deadly storms that have struck the

United States this hurricane season, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll.

The survey found that 56 percent believed that

global warming is occurring, whereas 40 percent said they were not convinced. That is unchanged from a poll conducted in April, before

the hurricane season, which suggests that hurricanes Katrina and Rita did not substantially alter the public’s view on climate change.

The new poll found that relatively few Americans saw the recent storms as God’s work, and only a fraction of those said the

storms were divine punishment.

About one in four Americans — 23 percent — viewed the storms as “deliberate acts of God.” Among

those who saw a divine hand at work this hurricane season, only 8 percent believed that God sent the storms to punish sinners. About half

said the storms were intended as a “warning,” but one in seven viewed them as tests of faith. Evangelical Christians were only slightly

more likely than the general public to see hurricanes as acts of God or to view them as a divine punishment.

A total of 1,019

randomly selected adults were interviewed by telephone Sept. 23 to 27. The margin of sampling error for the overall results is plus or

minus three percentage points.

The Deluge – Complete Coverage of

Hurricane Katrina — Beliefnet.com [mjh: a less scientific poll of “believers”]

One thought on “not as dumb as we (so often) seem”

  1. But he PROMISED. Oh,

    wait, I’ve just read Genesis, Chapter 9 in its entirety. These folks may have something here after all. If any of you happen to also

    read my blog, http://www.walkingraven.com, you know about God’s forgetfulness when it comes to the earth and rain. See my September 9, 2005

    entry “Of Rosemary [for rememberance] and Flies to Wanton Boys.” Chapter 9 is where God makes his covenant with Noah to never again

    destroy the earth by flood. As a sign of this promise, he set his bow in the sky. Well, it turns out the rainbow isn’t so much a sign

    as the equivalent of a string around his finger — one that would, of course, befit a deity of his stature. At least that’s what he

    indicates to Noah in verses 14 -15 when he explains, “When I bring clouds over the earth and the bow is seen in the clouds, I will

    remember my covenant that is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh; and the waters shall never again become a flood

    to destroy all flesh.” And then, as is often the case with the elderly, he repeats himself in verse 16, “When the bow is in the clouds,

    I will see it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is on the earth.” (I might

    also be a little worried about his tendency to disassociate.) In any event, I guess hurricanes become category 5’s when God’s being

    particulary absent-minded. And now you know the rest of the story.

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