It’s often said – and probably true – that Australia has become more secular over the last couple of generations. Yet while the influence of Church Christianity may have waned – that doesn’t say much about Australians’ changing beliefs on social issues.
Scott Steel’s well-researched blog Pollytics.com carries a very informative article entitled: Our Changing Views on the Death Penalty.
Scott summaries the results of a recently-published opinion poll by Roy Morgan Research: Australians say penalty for murder should be Imprisonment (64%) rather than the Death Penalty (23%)
Roy Morgan has been conducting the same poll within Australia since 1947. Scott has turned the results of polling over the last sixty years – presented in tabular form by Roy Morgan Research – into graphs that show the long term trends very clearly.
The results of more questions related to this topic – and other graphs displaying comparable trends – are available in the Pollytics.com article.
It’s a fascinating piece of research.
I have an antipathy to institutionalized murder and find these results a welcome indication that support for more humane polices continues to grow.
While our political elites have been seduced and cajoled into supporting the war mongering, liberty-restricting policies of Australia’s misguided ‘allies’, Australians as a whole are much less keen on violent solutions to complex problems.
Opponents of citizen-initiated referenda often cite the death penalty as an example of why putting more power in the hands of the public might lead to blood-thirsty, mob-rule type polices – ergo (the argument goes) it’s ’safer’ to let politicians make the decisions at arms reach from the will of the general public.
These long-term data suggest it has been a false argument for quite some time.
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This is not true. Europeans show much more extremes like Communism and Fascism. Our system is more like a Fabian socialist ideal.
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