Celebrity Chasing Online
More than a third of online adults (36%) have used a search engine to find information about famous or notable people.
More than a third of online adults (36%) have used a search engine to find information about famous or notable people.
Nearly nine out of 10 Americans (86%) are "tired of having a country;" frequently cited reasons include a lack of significant results from the democratic process (36%) dissatisfaction with customer service (28%), and exhaustion (22%), as reported by The Onion.
Shortly before the count of U.S. military fatalities reached 4,000, a Pew survey found that only 28% of U.S. adults were able to correctly specify the approximate number of Americans who have died in the Iraq war, far fewer than the number able to estimate troop deaths correctly in earlier surveys.
Fewer than one-in-five Americans (17%) now rate the US economy as performing well -- a sharp decline from the already low number (26%) who viewed the economy as in good or excellent state in the first month of 2008
A majority of journalists at national media outlets (62%) say that journalism is heading in the wrong direction.
Only about a third (32%) of Buddhists in the United States are Asian; a majority (53%) are white, and most are converts to Buddhism.
Nearly half of all internet users have searched for information about themselves online, up from just 22% in 2002.
In this year's primary elections in three states -- California, Texas and New Mexico -- Latino voters more than accounted for Sen. Hillary Clinton's total margin of victory.
By roughly two-to-one (63% to 32%), more Democratic voters say the super delegates -- primarily current and former elected officials and members of the Democratic National Committee -- should vote for the candidate who was won the most support in caucuses and primaries.
A huge partisan gap divides Americans on the question of whether the U.S. is making progress in defeating the insurgency in Iraq with 80% of Republicans saying that it is, but only 36% of Democrats agreeing.