Kuwait Times

Shootings weighed on Americans in ‘15

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NEW YORK: Mass shootings and attacks weighed heavily on the minds of Americans in 2015, according to a new poll that found most believe this year was worse for the world than last year. Take a look at the key findings of The Associated Press-Times Square Alliance poll.

Preoccupie­d by mass shootings

Americans say the most important events of 2015 were a string of mass shootings, including the attacks in San Bernardino, California, and Paris, plus Islamic State group atrocities. Fifty-seven percent of those polled say this year was worse than the last year for the world as a whole, up from the 38 percent asked that question a year ago. Only 10 percent believe 2015 was a better year than 2014, while 32 percent think there wasn’t much difference.

Americans also are much less likely than they were a year ago to believe that the current year was better for the United States - only 17 percent compared with 30 percent a year ago. Thirty-seven percent think this year was worse for the country than last year, while 44 percent don’t think there was much difference. On a personal level, fewer than a third (29 percent) believe 2015 was better for them than 2014, while 21 percent feel it was worse, compared with 15 percent in 2014.

Interviewe­d separately from the poll, Jason Pruitt, a 43-year-old corporate pilot from the Detroit area, said security concerns were a factor in deciding whether to take his wife and daughter along on a Christmas trip to New York. “We were thinking about not coming this year, because of everything that’s going on,” Pruitt said. But they went ahead “because when you change your life, the terrorists win.”

Three events share top spot

Of those polled, 68 percent listed mass shootings in the US as very or extremely important news events this year, including the one in San Bernardino that heightened fears of domestic terrorism, plus shootings in Charleston, South Carolina; Roseburg, Oregon; and Chattanoog­a, Tennessee.

Close behind, at 64 percent, were the Paris attacks that ushered in 2015, targeting Charlie Hebdo and the Jewish market, then the Bataclan concert hall and other city sites in November. And third, at 63 percent, came the Islamic State group’s various far-flung atrocities. Commenting on the completed poll was 32-yearold JP Fury, working in a food truck in Times Square. “At this point, I’m numb to all of it,” he said. “This is nothing new. Every week there’s a new shooting somewhere in America, and there’s a new terrorist attack somewhere around the world.”

Other issues

Domestical­ly, 44 percent of those polled rate as extremely or very important the deaths of blacks in encounters with police that sparked “Black Lives Matter” protests in Baltimore and Chicago. Another 44 percent rate the deal reached to curtail Iran’s nuclear program as important, and nearly as many (42 percent) Europe’s migrant crisis. Only 40 percent said the presidenti­al race was important to them, with the Paris climate change conference right behind (at 38 percent), followed by the Supreme Court’s legalizati­on of gay marriage (36 percent) and the Cuban-US thaw (30 percent). — AP

 ??  ?? CHICAGO: Melvin Jones, facing camera, hugs Robin Andrews, both brothers of Bettie Jones, 55, in Jones’ living room after she was shot and killed by a Chicago police officer on Saturday December 26, 2015. — AP
CHICAGO: Melvin Jones, facing camera, hugs Robin Andrews, both brothers of Bettie Jones, 55, in Jones’ living room after she was shot and killed by a Chicago police officer on Saturday December 26, 2015. — AP
 ??  ?? LAS VEGAS: A file picture taken on December 15, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada, shows Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump during a presidenti­al debate. —AFP
LAS VEGAS: A file picture taken on December 15, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada, shows Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump during a presidenti­al debate. —AFP

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