1. When asked to name the five specific freedoms in the First Amendment, 57 percent of Americans name freedom of speech, followed by 19 percent who say the freedom of religion, 10 percent mention the freedom of the press, 10 percent mention the right to assemble, and 2 percent name the right to petition. Thirty-three percent of Americans cannot name any of the rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.
2. About half of respondents (51 percent) agreed that the U.S. Constitution establishes a Christian nation. Women (55 percent) are more likely than men (46 percent) to believe that America was created as a Christian nation. Also, those 50 or older (54 percent) are more likely to think that than their younger peers (37 percent).
3. 54 percent believe the Supreme Court’s ruling on same-sex marriage will have no impact on religious freedom. Just under a third (31 percent) feel as though the decision would be harmful to religious freedom, while only 8 percent say it will be good for religious freedom. Republicans (50 percent) are more likely to see this as harmful than either Democrats (19 percent) or independents (24 percent).
5. Only 24 percent now think that the news media try to report on news without bias. Of those surveyed, only 7 percent of 18-29 year olds agree that the media try to report without bias, compared to 13 percent of 30-49 year olds and 26 percent of those 50 or older. Also, Democrats (36 percent) are significantly more likely to think that the news media try to be unbiased than do either Republicans (19 percent) or independents (21 percent).
6. An overwhelming 88 percent of Americans agree that people should be allowed to record the activities of the police as long as they do not interfere with police actions and 83 percent agree that video from police body-cams should become part of the public record.
7. 54 percent oppose the idea of allowing the government to secretly spy on individual online messages and phone calls as a means to catch terrorists, while thirty-seven percent are in favor of allowing the government to spy on personal communications to fight terrorism. Republicans (44 percent) are more likely than either Democrats (39 percent) or independents (31 percent) to support government spying on individuals as a way to catch terrorists.