The establishment pollsters at Pew Research are at it again, manipulating survey data to hide inconvenient truths about Americans' real views on abortion and the sanctity of life.
In their latest polling on abortion attitudes, Pew buried a stunning revelation: four out of ten Americans believe that "human life begins at conception, so an embryo is a person with rights." This bombshell finding completely undermines the left's narrative about unlimited abortion access and dangerous drugs like mifepristone.
Instead of leading with this earth-shattering data, Pew chose to bury it deep in their methodology, hoping most Americans would never see it. Why? Because it destroys the Democrat talking point that opposition to abortion is some fringe position held by "extremists."
The Poll They Don't Want You To See
The Federalist exposed how Pew deliberately downplayed these findings, noting that the polling organization went out of its way to frame the abortion debate around access to mifepristone rather than the fundamental question of when life begins.
This is classic mainstream media manipulation, folks. When the data doesn't fit their pro-abortion agenda, they simply hide it from view and hope nobody notices.
"Pew buries the fact that four in 10 Americans agree that 'human life begins at conception, so an embryo is a person with rights,'" The Federalist reported.
This polling comes at a crucial time as President Trump's administration works to restore pro-life policies and protect the most vulnerable Americans. The fact that 40% of Americans recognize the personhood of unborn children shows the pro-life movement has strong grassroots support across the nation.
But don't expect the legacy media to report on this honestly. They're too busy pushing their radical agenda to acknowledge that millions of Americans believe in the fundamental right to life.
How many other "inconvenient" poll results are organizations like Pew hiding from the American people? And why should we trust pollsters who deliberately bury data that challenges their preferred narrative?
