WT EDITORIAL
11% Say Communism Better Than U.S. System




































Doug Fiedor
[email protected]  
  
  
Here's a testament to the sad situation in our public school system, as well as 
the total stupidity of some voters!  This is very distressing, indeed.  
"11% of Likely U.S. Voters think communism is morally superior to the U.S. 
system of politics.  . . .  Thirteen percent (13%) are not sure.  . . .  Voters 
ages 18 to 29 are much less critical of communism as an ideology than their 
elders are. . . .   only 53% of American adults thought capitalism is better 
than socialism." 
Color me discouraged.    
  
http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/general_politics/
march_2011/11_say_communism_better_than_u_s_system_of_politics_
and_economics 
  
  
11% Say Communism Better Than U.S. System of Politics and Economics 
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Rasmussen Reports 
Communism as an ideological force largely died with the collapse of the Soviet 
Union 20 years ago, but even with many of its horrors increasingly forgotten, 
U.S. voters overwhelmingly reject the ideology that contended for world 
dominance for much of the 20th Century. 

Still, 11% of Likely U.S. Voters think communism is morally superior to the 
U.S. system of politics and economics, according to a new Rasmussen Reports 
national telephone survey.  But 77% disagree and say the U.S. system is morally 
superior.  Thirteen percent (13%) are not sure. (To see survey question 
wording, click here).  
  
Communism calls for the elimination of all private property with everything 
owned in common, and voters even more emphatically reject it as an economic 
theory.  Eighty-seven percent (87%) say, in practical terms, free market 
economies work better than communist economies.  Only four percent (4%) say 
communist economies work better.

Similarly, 80% of voters say the U.S. system of politics and economics is 
better for middle class workers than communism is.  Ten percent (10%) say 
communism is a better option, and another 10% are undecided. 

(Want a free daily e-mail update? If it's in the news, it's in our polls). 


Rasmussen Reports updates are also available on Twitter or Facebook.  

The survey of 1,000 Likely Voters nationwide was conducted on March 12-13, 2011 
by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points 
with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is 
conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology. 
  
Seventy-three percent (73%) of voters view communism as a failed ideology.  
Twelve percent (12%) say that’s not true. Fifteen percent (15%) are not sure. 
  
Voters ages 18 to 29 are much less critical of communism as an ideology than 
their elders are.  Conservative voters believe more strongly than moderates and 
liberals that communism is a failed ideology, but majorities of all three 
groups share that view. 
  
In terms of world history, 85% of all voters nationwide believe that the 
collapse of communism in Eastern Europe was at least somewhat important, with 
71% who describe it as Very Important.  Only eight percent (8%) say it was not 
very or not at all important. 
  
While 87% of Mainstream voters rate the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe 
as important in terms of history, nearly one-in-three Political Class voters 
(32%) view it as unimportant historically.  Generally speaking, however, 
there’s little difference of opinion between the two groups when it comes to 
comparing the U.S. economic and political system with communism.   
  
In November 2009, on the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, 93% 
of Likely U.S. Voters said the fall of the wall and the collapse of communism 
were at least somewhat important in terms of world history.  That included 70% 
who said they were Very Important. 
  
The majority of voters across all demographic categories are in general 
agreement on all of these questions, although there clearly are degrees of 
passion. Republicans and conservatives, as they have historically in this 
country, hold the strongest negative feelings about communism. 
Socialism with its emphasis on a government-regulated economy is considered a 
transitional economic phase on the path to communism.  
In an April 2009 survey, 21% of American adults said that the U.S. economy is 
partially socialist, and another five percent (5%) said, generally speaking, 
the United States already has a fully socialist economy.  At the same time, 
indicative of the suspicions many had following the Wall Street meltdown and 
the government’s bailout response, only 53% of American adults thought 
capitalism is better than socialism.  
  
Voters overwhelmingly prefer a free market economy to an economy managed by the 
government and think government economic control helps big businesses at the 
expense of small ones. 
  
Additional information from this survey and a full demographic breakdown are 
available to Platinum Members only. 
  
  
Check out Doug's website
http://fiedorreport.blogspot.com/ 





 





      

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