I wouldn't trust any of these findings, even if Gallup has a good sampling and execution design, which it hasn't always used in the past. There's a tremendous likelihood of systematic bias in respondents, which hasn't been noticed in previous years. For example, this is a phone survey. . .who's home to take the survey calls? Respondents who are at home, probably watching a lot of MSM and bored enough to answer their stupid questions. Plus, with more than a year of socially engineered chaos and confusion, I doubt people think of themselves as "socially liberal" or "socially conservative" anymore. Brain fog doesn't make for meaningful survey responses.
I wouldn't trust any of these findings, even if Gallup has a good sampling and execution design, which it hasn't always used in the past. There's a tremendous likelihood of systematic bias in respondents, which hasn't been noticed in previous years. For example, this is a phone survey. . .who's home to take the survey calls? Respondents who are at home, probably watching a lot of MSM and bored enough to answer their stupid questions. Plus, with more than a year of socially engineered chaos and confusion, I doubt people think of themselves as "socially liberal" or "socially conservative" anymore. Brain fog doesn't make for meaningful survey responses.