Americans often meet religious difference with fear or suspicion, criticizing the moral concerns and political interests of people who don't share their beliefs, according to a new survey on American values from Baylor University.
Around half of evangelicals say that Muslims or atheists want to limit their freedom, and 44.1 percent say that Muslims pose a personal safety threat. Two-thirds of religious "nones," or adults who don't affiliate with a particular faith group, and half of Jews say that conservative Christians want to restrict the freedom of others, the survey reported.
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