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Home Front: Culture Wars
Students Trust UN More Than Federal Government
2005-11-17
(CNSNews.com) - College students trust the United Nations more than they trust the federal government, according to survey results released Wednesday by the Harvard University Institute of Politics. The survey, the latest in a series of college surveys conducted by the IOP, found that 52 percent of college students "trust the United Nations to do the right thing all or most of the time." Forty-four percent felt the same way about the United States government. Even fewer, 39 percent, said they trust President Bush to do the right thing all or most of the time.
The U.S. military is the most trusted institution among college students, "despite the war in Iraq," according to the survey. Sixty-five percent of students said they trust the military, while 60 percent said they trust the Supreme Court to "do the right thing."
Very strange results, wonder what percentage of the students were stoned when polled
Students' trust in the U.N. eclipses the general public's faith in the organization, according to a January 2005 Harris Interactive poll, which found that only 30 percent of American adults "tend to trust" the United Nations, while 44 percent "tend not to trust" it.

IOP consultant John DellaVolte told Cybercast News Service that the group always finds a high level of support for the U.N. among college students. In April 2004, an IOP survey found that 74 percent of American college students believed the U.N. should "take the lead" in addressing international issues. "This generation thinks about politics much differently than the generation before, where it's not constrained to just North America," DellaVolte said. "They see how the entire world is interconnected."

DellaVolte said the biggest opinion gaps between students and older Americans involve issues relating to international relations. "When you look at issues related to the right track or wrong track of the country ... college students are in line with the general electorate," DellaVolte said. But on issues related to the war and the United Nations, "college students are much more likely to give the United Nations the benefit of the doubt as compared to older Americans."

DellaVolte said he thinks students view the U.N. differently because their studies and job opportunities make them "more optimistic about the process and the involvement of the United Nations and other nations in the world." Dr. Nile Gardiner, a fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said the survey results should come "as no real surprise" because "college students tend to be overwhelmingly idealistic and tend to be more left-of-center than conservative as a whole."

Gardiner said that "often students do not pay sufficient attention to what is actually happening inside the United Nations and in terms of what the U.N. is doing on the international stage." "Their faith in the United Nations is hugely misguided," Gardiner said, "especially in light of not only the oil-for-food scandal, but a wave of recent scandals that have fundamentally harmed the image of the United Nations across the United States." Gardiner said he thinks students' opinions of the U.N. are shaped largely by "a biased interpretation of the work of the U.N. and other international institutions through liberal professors who tend to dominate the majority of American campuses."
That, and the fact you rarely see any reporting on UN failures by the MSM.

The IOP survey covered a wide variety of political issues. Ninety-one percent of students said that running for elected office is "an honorable thing to do," but 70 percent said politicians "seem to be motivated by selfish reasons."
I'd agree with that
It also found that fewer than 50 percent of college students consider themselves "politically active."
Three quarters of the student population believes that "signing an e-mail petition about a social or political issue," and "wearing a t-shirt to reflect your political or social opinion" constitute political activity.
"Like dude, you expect us to go vote or something?"
Posted by:Steve

#16  Students Trust UN More Than Federal Government

Because they don't know better. That's why this Oil For Food fiasco needs to be illuminated as fully as possible.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2005-11-17 15:21  

#15  When exactly did we stop teaching critcal thinking in our schools? When did question authority only apply to Conservatives?
Posted by: rjschwarz   2005-11-17 15:10  

#14  No only are many of these little pinheads brainwashed but they attack anyone that doesn't follow or believe the political crap that they are handed. I had a run in with one of these little experts last night. He knew "everything", but knew nothing of reality. The outright crap they except as "fact" and reality is mind boggling.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-11-17 14:52  

#13  You must remember that each university is ground zero for liberal brainwashing. At some point the college students will realize that the lib professors are now "the man" and will revolt.

At some point. That will probably take a dem in office though since so many of them are blinded by the seething Bush hatred all around they get confused.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2005-11-17 13:42  

#12  If you aren't a liberal at 20...
Posted by: Pholurong Phart3144   2005-11-17 13:18  

#11  They need to watch Hotel Rowanda and see how great the UN works. Not surprised about the survey.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-11-17 13:17  

#10  My thoughts, too, DB. My friends didn't consider politics until much later. I had done a bit of traveling courtesy of Uncle Sam and wasn't quite so naive but I still didn't think about politics much.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2005-11-17 13:07  

#9  Keep in mind, these are college kids. I thought the UN was pretty cool, too....but then I graduated and had to grow up.

Poll them again in 5 years, and I bet they'll have a different perspective.
Posted by: Desert Blondie   2005-11-17 12:56  

#8  Hey, I remember when I was young and stupid and voted for Jimmy Carter.
You learn. Usually when you learn the hard way, the lesson sticks.
Posted by: tu3031   2005-11-17 11:15  

#7  mmurray brings up a good point. I'd like to see the breakdown of who they polled, not only major by major (liberal arts vs. engineering, etc.), but also which schools were polled. I'd be willing to bet somehow they didn't poll any SEC schools!
Posted by: BA   2005-11-17 11:11  

#6  "Like dude, you expect us to go vote or something?"

Shhhh, Steve, lol.

I propose free dope be offered on every college and university campus the day before elections. Call it Moonbat Monday, lol. THey won't be able to find the polling places if we give 'em the good stuff and lots of it to share with their "politically active" buddies, lol.

If you can't read this, but are pretty sure that, somehow, it's bad and everything is Bush's fault, thank a Ward Churchill Professor.
Posted by: .com   2005-11-17 10:54  

#5  "trust the (fill in the blank) to do the right thing..."

Could you be alittle more vague please?
Posted by: DepotGuy   2005-11-17 10:53  

#4  Surprised? On Deep Blue campuses which promote anti-American hate but hammer anyone else stupid enough to speak anything else but the approved marxist based orthodoxy? I'm shocked, shocked to discover this!
Posted by: Spurt Shereter8116   2005-11-17 10:48  

#3  shows what an edumacation can do fo yo
Posted by: Jerelet Thineling2988   2005-11-17 09:52  

#2  I bet they just polled the liberal arts students. The buisness and engineering students think for themselves and don't have any respect for the UN.
Posted by: mmurray821   2005-11-17 09:41  

#1  And these empty heads are students because of their ignorance and naivete.
Posted by: ed   2005-11-17 09:13  

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