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Author Topic: Survey Says Most Americans Want to Ban Bitcoin: Highlighting Need for Education  (Read 2927 times)
Coinbuddy (OP)
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June 22, 2014, 03:23:14 PM
 #1

Bitcoin, the five year old digital currency, is gaining mass traction as bitcoin companies receive hundreds of millions of dollars in investment, but the majority of the American public remains highly uninformed of the benefits and uses of bitcoin and have heard little to nothing about it.

In a new survey published today, almost 2,000 American voters were asked of their opinion on a range of financial questions, including bitcoin, during the end of May and the beginning of June. The results show a wide gap between the young and the old, the rich and the poor, the religious as opposed to the non-religious and a gender difference between males and females. The younger, richer, the less religious and the more male you are, the more likely you are to know about bitcoin, be permissive towards allowing it for use in commerce and to use or to have used the currency.

The Generations Gap

As one would expect, younger individuals are highly enthusiastic about bitcoin, especially when compared to the older population. 55% of 18 to 29 year olds know some or a lot about bitcoin, as opposed to 62% of 30 to 45 year old who know little to nothing. The lack of knowledge increases slightly for individuals older than 45, with 66% of those age 45 to 65 and 73% of individuals older than 65 knowing nothing or very little about the online currency.

This lack of knowledge highlights the need for more education in all age groups, especially for the older generations,  as it seems to have led to concerning attitudes towards using bitcoins for commerce. The young, 58%, and the middle age group, 54%, show overwhelming support for allowing the purchase of goods and services with the digital currency. The older age groups have the opposite attitude with 64% of 45-65 year old and a staggering 73% of individuals older than 65 stating that they were against voluntary transactions in goods and services if the means of exchange is bitcoins.

The Rich and Poor, The Religious and the Atheists, the Male and the Female

The higher the income and wealth, the more likely you are to know about bitcoin with 51% of earners of 100,000 dollars and more knowing some or a lot about the currency, as opposed to only 29% of individuals earning 50,000 or less. Perplexingly, this greater knowledge does not translate into a highly permissive attitudes, as, although the high income earners are slightly more in favor than the other income groups towards allowing commerce with bitcoins, the majority, 55%, are against it.

Non-religious individuals, 48%, know some or a lot about bitcoin, as opposed to 35% of religious individuals, corresponding to a 50-50 split on whether the government should allow or prohibit transactions in bitcoins for the non-religious individuals as opposed to 63% of protestants and 58% of roman Catholics who are against the purchase of goods and services with bitcoins.

The same attitudes are expressed by females as opposed to males, with only 27% of females knowing some or a lot about bitcoin as opposed to 48% of males and 62% of females being in favor of banning bitcoin commerce as opposed to 53% of males.

 

The Need for Education

There seems to be a strong correlation between individuals who state that they know some or a lot about bitcoin and their permissive attitude towards the purchasing of goods and services with bitcoin. The more they know about bitcoin, the more likely they are to be in favor of allowing it for the purchase of goods and services and the more likely to have used it or currently use the currency.

The effects of education on attitudes towards bitcoin highlights the importance of informing and educating the public on the nature and advantages of bitcoin and the need to counteract misconceptions or misinformation about the currency. The greatest misconception may be that bitcoin is pervasively used for illegal activities. Studies however show that the dollar remains the currency of choice, far surpassing bitcoin, to purchase and sell controlled substances and other illegal goods or services. The general public needs to be informed that purchases from Silk Road amount to an almost insignificant 0.25% of the total global money-laundering and other illegal activities, accounting for only 1 billion dollars out of a 500 billion to 1 trillion market and that bitcoin has far greater and legal uses than purchasing goods or services on Silk Road.

Thankfully, merchant adoption and investment in bitcoin is increasing at a fast pace with celebrities and industry leaders in Silicon Valley and beyond adopting and promoting the currency. As such, it may be only a matter of time before the misconceptions are addressed, leading to an attitude change as the public is informed and accustomed to, what many call, the greatest technological innovation since the internet.

Source "http://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/news/americans-want-ban-bitcoin-new-survey-reveals-highlighting-need-education/2014/06/20"
cooldgamer
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June 22, 2014, 03:29:37 PM
 #2

Just means that the propaganda media has done it's job making BTC look like some evil online drug money.  It's an uphill battle to legitimize it, but in time we'll win.  I did find the part about religious people wanting to ban transactions with it interesting.  Brainwashed people tend to believe anything shoved down their throats Cheesy

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June 22, 2014, 03:30:28 PM
 #3

I would imagine that similar percentages of each group get their news predigested from the major outlets and do very little thinking or research on their own.

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June 22, 2014, 03:31:02 PM
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When I first found out about bitcoin, I was confused out of my mind. Like what the hell are blocks and confirmations and all that shit. Even the bitcoin website didn't explain clearly at all.

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June 22, 2014, 03:45:51 PM
 #5

It would be really nice to see the exact questions.  Sometimes they are biased to obtain a specific result (e.g. push-polling), so knowing the questions and the context in which they are asked is important.  E.g.

Q 1. "Bitcoins have been used to buy drugs.  Have you heard that?" 

Q 2. "Should bitcoins be banned?"

v.s.

Q 1. "Bitcoins have been used to send money to charities around the world.  Have you heard that?" 

Q 2. "Should bitcoins be banned?"



:-)
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June 22, 2014, 03:53:40 PM
 #6

Classic case of people simply fearing what they dont understand.

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June 22, 2014, 04:05:01 PM
 #7

Quote
In a new survey published today, almost 2,000 American voters were asked of their opinion on a range of financial questions, including bitcoin, during the end of May and the beginning of June.

Phony mathematics for political polling, note how they scream about percentages yet in reality it's only 2000 people that have taken part, 2000 is not a representation of an entire country, you could easily get that many to turn up at a poll if they hate Bitcoin enough and make up some biased results. As someone who has had to learn how to calculate percentages properly after leaving school I have ranted about this many times, you can title it "2,000 American pollers want Bitcoin banned" but not "Most Americans want Bitcoin banned" which is a total lie.
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June 22, 2014, 04:08:01 PM
Last edit: June 22, 2014, 10:31:08 PM by bananaControl
 #8

Who gives a flying f*** about what the uninformed masses in the USA think?

Here's some more random info, and who knows, some of these claims about the stupidity of the masses might even be true!

- 25% of USAnians don't believe in Darwin's theory of evolution while less than 40% do.
- Two out of five USAnians think teachers should be able to lead prayer in the classroom, despite the fact that the separation of church and state is a foundation of their democracy.
- As of just a few years ago, about half of USAnians still suspected a connection between Saddam Hussein and the attacks of September 11th.
- Nearly one-fifth of Americans think Obama is a Muslim.
- About a decade ago, 20 percent of USAnians still believed that the sun revolves around the earth.
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June 22, 2014, 04:11:19 PM
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Asking the general public what they think about bitcoin at this stage is silly. Most of them will either not understand it at all or heard mostly bad things about it.

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June 22, 2014, 04:14:40 PM
 #10

It would be really nice to see the exact questions.  Sometimes they are biased to obtain a specific result (e.g. push-polling), so knowing the questions and the context in which they are asked is important.  E.g.

Q 1. "Bitcoins have been used to buy drugs.  Have you heard that?" 

Q 2. "Should bitcoins be banned?"

v.s.

Q 1. "Bitcoins have been used to send money to charities around the world.  Have you heard that?" 

Q 2. "Should bitcoins be banned?"



:-)


Polls that don't reveal methodology are pretty much worthless. Anyone with an agenda can make a poll say what they want.

bitsmichel
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June 22, 2014, 04:16:14 PM
 #11

Asking the general public what they think about bitcoin at this stage is silly. Most of them will either not understand it at all or heard mostly bad things about it.

I agree on this, bitcoin is still in the early adaptor phase. It's like asking people what they think about the world wide web in the early 90's.

Neg
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June 22, 2014, 04:16:53 PM
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Yawn, another worthless and useless poll. Move along nothing to see here.
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June 22, 2014, 04:25:32 PM
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Who gives a flying f*** about what the uninformed masses in the USA thinks?

Here's some more random info, and who knows, some of these claims about the stupidity of the masses might even be true!

- 25% of USAnians don't believe in Darwin's theory of evolution while less than 40% do.
- Two out of five USAnians think teachers should be able to lead prayer in the classroom, despite the fact that the separation of church and state is a foundation of their democracy.
- As of just a few years ago, about half of USAnians still suspected a connection between Saddam Hussein and the attacks of September 11th.
- Nearly one-fifth of Americans think Obama is a Muslim.
- About a decade ago, 20 percent of USAnians still believed that the sun revolves around the earth.


Amen Grin Tongue

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June 22, 2014, 04:59:45 PM
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Bitcoin is a new invention, nothing can stop it.

Limited number of coins is as same as limited number of real estate properties where prices always go up because of the growing population demand.
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June 22, 2014, 05:20:24 PM
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Q 1. "Bitcoins have been used to send money to charities around the world.  Have you heard that?" 

Q 2. "Should bitcoins be banned?"



Ban it! Non-government entities can't help people! Cheesy
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June 22, 2014, 06:09:01 PM
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The young and the educated are favoring Bitcoin. The less educated are against crypto. That is a good sign. No need to get disappointed with the survey results. The opinion will change pretty soon, once BTC goes mainstream.
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June 22, 2014, 06:22:25 PM
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5 to 10 years from now, you could be buying properties and cars with bitcoin all around the world
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June 22, 2014, 06:24:21 PM
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The typical US point of view is to ban anything that represents change, or something you dont understand. And this is coming from an American.  It's pretty sad.
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June 22, 2014, 06:58:44 PM
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How low the bastion of freedom has sunk, it saddens me.
what ever happened to the land of the free, all that remains now is socialism and manipulated fiat money.
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June 22, 2014, 07:24:56 PM
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Ask any parent, bitcoins can be used to purchase drugs on the internet, they would immediately jump to banning. Ask any female, bitcoins is used in the online sex trade, she would say ban bitcoin. Ask anyone whose work is related to finance or economics, you will get the same thing.

It depends who you ask and what kind of news they heard about bitcoin. If the survey is done after giving them an introduction. The result would be very different.
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