According to a new opinion poll, many Americans believe that the racial discrimination of the United States deteriorates during the work of the Trump regime for over a year. But at least many people think that this is not a big problem - at least not the problem they need to discuss
Poll also found that Americans differed in the frequency with which they personally participated in racial discussions with families and friends. The majority of Americans (51%) sometimes said they are talking about racial relationships sometimes with friends and family, but 47% say that they have not talked with friends and family almost like that I answered. NBC News | SurveyMonkey survey was conducted for 6,518 adults nationwide from May 14 to 21, 2018. Respondents in this non-probabilistic survey were selected from about 3 million people surveyed on the SurveyMonkey platform everyday. The result error is estimated to be plus or minus 1.5 percentage points. For complete results and methods, please click here.
For white people far more than white people, conversation about race is pretty common. Overall, about a quarter of Americans are far less than they talk about the presidential campaign (59%) or economy (45%) with the same frequency, often they are about racial or racial inequality Talk with friends and family. Share it. About a quarter (27%) people said migrants are often subject to conversations with friends and family. Blacks say that the topics of white inequality and racial relationships often appear in conversations with friends and family, almost twice the whites. Approximately one-quarter of black adults are said to be topics of racial inequality (41%) and ethnicity (38%), and about one-fifth of white people are talking about. About three-thirds (31%) of Hispanics often talk about racial disparity and about a quarter (26%) often talk about race.
Racial relationship: almost a year after the cards became president, most Americans (60%) stated that his elections exacerbated racial relations in the United States. One-third said that the election of playing cards does not change in terms of race relations, only 8% said that his election made them better. Immediately after the cards were elected in 2016, nearly half (48%) of Republican voters said he expects elections to improve racial relations. About a year later, only 17% of Republicans said they had it. At the same time, about one-eighth (83%) of the Democratic voters said that the racial relationship worsened in Mr. Trump's election, and the difference in the proportion of ethnic relations that he expected the election to deteriorate in November 2016 is It was not so. Large (81%)