Did the pollsters really expect large numbers of people in the Muslim world to endorse a terrorist organization that is a byword for bloodletting and has attracted undeserved hostility and reputational baggage to their faith?
A more helpful and illuminating survey should have asked specific questions about extremist views as well as views on political Islam and violent jihad in Muslim countries.
More broadly, no one on this list needs to be lectured on the inherent malleability of statistical discourses—on how statistics can sometimes obscure more than they clarify. You can make statistics say anything depending on how you frame the questions.
Sent from my iPhone
On Aug 28, 2021, at 1:36 AM, Harrow, Kenneth <harrow@msu.edu> wrote:
this issue came up earlier: how popular is al qaeda in muslim lands. this is an answer in a brooks column:
Across 11 lands in which Pew surveyed Muslims in 2013, a median of only 13 percent had a favorable opinion of Al Qaeda.
--
ken
kenneth harrow
professor emeritus
dept of english
michigan state university
517 803-8839
harrow@msu.edu
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