I am not surprised in the least.
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LINK TO TEST
Answers to Your Missed Questions:
Question #4 - B. Would slavery be allowed to expand to new territories?
Question #7 - D. Gettysburg Address
Question #10 - C. Religion
Question #11 - A. their arguments helped lead to the adoption of the Bill of Rights
Question #13 - E. certain permanent moral and political truths are accessible to human reason
Question #15 - E. Thomas Jefferson’s letters
Question #27 - A. the price system utilizes more local knowledge of means and ends
Question #33 - D. tax per person equals government spending per person
thought that also, but i'm qualified for politics, a mere 67questions had debateable answers.
Usually when you see sensationalist stories about the ignorance of Americans they cite wrong answers to quiz questions such as "in which half-century did the civil war occur" or to people misidentifying the quote "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" as being from the Declaration of Independence. This quiz though had some fairly tough ones, such as "what did FDR threaten to do when the Supreme Court struck down key provisions of the New Deal in 1935 & 1936" and a question about the Lincoln-Douglas debates that requried knowledge not only that they debated slavery but of what aspect of slavery they debated. While I admit that I would have wished that the average politician would have been able to score well up into the passing range on a test like this, I can understand why the proverbial man on the steet would score poorly.laphanphon wrote:thought that also, but i'm qualified for politics, a mere 67questions had debateable answers.![]()
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I think the amazing thing was that the man in the street only did worse than the "professionals" on 4 out of 33 of the questions (see my link above). On 29 of the questions they actually did better, on some questions significantly better.kdvsn wrote:[ While I admit that I would have wished that the average politician would have been able to score well up into the passing range on a test like this, I can understand why the proverbial man on the steet would score poorly.