Baltimore metro area identify as Christians. Note: 1% did not answer the question. Figures may not sum to 100% due to ...
Christians’ share among U.S. adults has fallen across demographic groups since 2007, but there has been overall stability in ...
Read about U.S. religious groups’ demographics – such as race/ethnicity, age, immigrant status, gender and sexual orientation ...
Millions of Americans have switched religions over the course of their lives, and most say their religiousness or ...
Views on this differ by age, education and how frequently workers use AI chatbots. Workers ages 18 to 49 are more likely than ...
Only 6% of workers say workplace AI use will lead to more job opportunities for them in the long run. About a third (32%) say ...
Identifying with a group for reasons “aside from religion” – such as ethnically, culturally, or because of family background ...
Most who are married say their spouse shares their religion, while 26% don’t. Read about interreligious marriages, spouses ...
In total, at least 80 lawmakers are foreign born or have at least one parent who was born in another country, including 61 in ...
As a kid, most Americans say they were raised in a religion, went to religious services at least monthly, and had at least ...
Workers’ views on AI vary by age, education and income level. Even so, feelings of worry tend to cut across these groups.
Overwhelming majorities expect transgender people (84%) and gay and lesbian people (76%) to lose influence under Trump.
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