THE SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER EDITORIAL BOARD
Thursday, June 19, 2003
President Bush continues to enjoy wide public support in national polls. Much of that support is based on his performance as commander in chief and the view that the Iraq war was both justified and successful.
Another poll, however, raises the question of just how informed that favorable opinion is.
There can be a wide gap between public opinion and public knowledge, according to the Program on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland.
The program's national poll, conducted in the middle of May, showed 34 percent of those surveyed believed that -- contrary to fact -- the United States has already found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Some degree of self-fulfilling prophecy may be at work in this startling bit of public delusion. This belief runs highest among those who approved of the decision to go to war. Overall, 60 percent remembered "the evidence that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction" as the U.S. government's main reason for attacking Iraq.
Also, more than one in five surveyed believed that Iraq used chemical or biological weapons during the war.
In a nation whose very governance is founded on the notion of an informed electorate, such widespread public ignorance of demonstrable facts poses a threat to national security greater than that of any terrorist.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/127225_iraqpolled.html
Thursday, June 19, 2003
President Bush continues to enjoy wide public support in national polls. Much of that support is based on his performance as commander in chief and the view that the Iraq war was both justified and successful.
Another poll, however, raises the question of just how informed that favorable opinion is.
There can be a wide gap between public opinion and public knowledge, according to the Program on International Policy Attitudes at the University of Maryland.
The program's national poll, conducted in the middle of May, showed 34 percent of those surveyed believed that -- contrary to fact -- the United States has already found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Some degree of self-fulfilling prophecy may be at work in this startling bit of public delusion. This belief runs highest among those who approved of the decision to go to war. Overall, 60 percent remembered "the evidence that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction" as the U.S. government's main reason for attacking Iraq.
Also, more than one in five surveyed believed that Iraq used chemical or biological weapons during the war.
In a nation whose very governance is founded on the notion of an informed electorate, such widespread public ignorance of demonstrable facts poses a threat to national security greater than that of any terrorist.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/127225_iraqpolled.html
