
Thirty-six percent of young American voters are at least somewhat confident in the US Social Security system,
according to a new poll. While almost two-thirds of voters 29-years-old and younger do not have much hope for the taxpayer funded retirement system, the newest numbers show a rise in confidence. Less than a month ago, only 19 percent of voters in the same demographic were at least somewhat confident.

When Gallup asked the public in 2003 whether America needed a third party, a majority opposed the idea. But asked again in 2007, the majority of both Democrats and Republicans, seemingly unsatisfied with the two-party system, welcomed more parties.
Well again this year, Americans have
changed their minds.

Forty-four percent of respondents believe America's best days are still to come, according to
a poll just released. The pessimists, who think the good days have passed, represent 41 percent of the surveyed group.
Optimism about the country's future appears tied to individual economic status — voters who make less than $40,000 a year are more likely to say the best days are behind the US.

"Race" hasn't been without its partner "card" much this election and the reason the subject has been
taboo and arguable could be this:
according to a new poll conducted by Stanford University, the percentage of voters who may reject Obama because of his race could easily outnumber the final difference between the candidates during the last election.
And the negative responders aren't all McCain Republicans, either. More than a third of white Democrats have negative views towards blacks calling them “lazy," “violent," and responsible for their own problems.

The US
government is far deeper in debt than any of the companies it is bailing out. Unsurprisingly, about seven percent of American voters think their government should bail out financial institutions, while 65 percent think the failed companies should file bankruptcy. A
new survey from Rasmussen suggests that the majority of Americans approve of the Fed's decision to let Lehman Brothers go bankrupt on Sunday, but disapprove of yesterday's decision to use $85 billion in
taxpayer money to save AIG.

The age-old question, "WWJD?" might have a hand in people's perception of the war on terror — or at least how information is gathered. A new poll shows that 57 percent of Southern evangelicals
believe that torture is justified as a means of gaining important information from suspected terrorists.

Americans have reconsidered their faith in the mixing religion and politics. A majority of Americans now say churches and other houses of worship should keep out of politics and not express their views on day-to-day social and political matters. Fifty-two percent of
those surveyed by Pew Research Center said that Churches should butt out, the highest level since the poll began in 1996.

Paging Dr. God? More than half of adults in the US
put more faith in the divine than in a doctor's care — 57 percent said God's intervention could save a dying family member even if their doctor had declared treatment futile.

Could "Kids or non?" be the new query akin to the smoking section question hitting airplanes soon? Judging by these results, lots would like that.

So we asked this question a while back when we were talking about the Fairness Doctrine — should
the government mandate political balance on TV and radio? Now Rasmussen has
polled on it, and it turns out nearly half — 47 percent — think this is a great idea.
It seems that thought doesn't extend to the Internet.