According to a new Gallup poll released this week the proportion of Americans who "are" anxious about the possibility of terrorist attacks has risen by 12 percentage points since 2014, now 51%.
Gallup said that terrorists attacked the rise of the Islamic state and that the attention may be gathered by killing some French caricature newspapers in Paris.
Concerns about economic and medical availability and affordable pricing are the greatest concern for Americans and everyone is causing "big" concern for over 50% of Americans.
Due to the controversy over Missouri State Ferguson, Americans' concerns about racial relations rose by 11 points and in August 2014 Mr. Michael Brown (a non-armed teenager) was fired . Even though the attention is rising, ethnic relations are still at the bottom of the list and only 28% of Americans are expressing concern.
There is good news on this list. Americans' concern for terrorism and ethnicity is rising, but concerns about unemployment in recession have disappeared. The proportion of Americans worried about unemployment has fallen sharply from 49% in 2014 to 37% this year. In addition, Mr. Gallup said that since the recession began, this number is not that low.
Among the topics in the list, Americans are not worried most about climate change. Race relationship and availability of affordable energy will satisfy the rest of the last three. Gallup, coupled with economic growth and falling gasoline prices, accused this shift on "expansion" consultations on racial discrimination and police brutality in certain communities.
Older Americans seem to be more concerned about potential terrorist attacks in the United States than young Americans. Less than half of Americans under the age of 50 say they are "very worried" about the problem. At the same time, about half of the majority of elderly aged 50 to 64 years (49%) and over 65 years (58%) expressed concern about "majority". Attacks gathered in the past by Gallup have found that Americans 'concern for terrorism is rising, so there is a possibility that concerns may increase after Brussels' attack at least in the short term. Even before recent attacks, standard attention levels were relatively high after 9/11. However, Americans generally prefer to express concerns about urgent domestic issues such as economics and medical care.
Washington, DC - 48% of Americans were "very concerned" about the possibility of future terrorist attacks in the United States before the terrorist attacks on at least 30 people in Brussels on Tuesday. The possibility of terrorist attacks is not the most concern for Americans. In the list of 13 different issues, more Americans have expressed "large" or "serious" concern about domestic problems such as medical, economic, crime.
The new Gallup poll released last month showed that the greatest concern for Americans is the availability and affordability of medical care. Many of our healthcare are top priorities after years of headlines on the healthcare issue at the heart of our health and peace of mind and the combination of political uncertainty and cost rises I will. . Including plans to improve universal health insurance and other forms of universal insurance, health insurance or Medicaid in the coming years, federal level, universal health insurance and other forms, and affordable medical law Proposals will be discussed. But despite the huge energy behind finding a long-term solution, the reality is unlikely that this Congress will pass them and our President signs their law It is less likely to do. So what do we do when trying to change the situation with Washington's politics? Are you sitting in our hand?