Millenials are awesome

Legion Troll

A fine upstanding poster
jesusdinosaur.jpg




Four in ten Americans still think the earth is young and God poofed them into existence 6000 years ago.

Out of that four in ten, most are conservative religious people and they ain’t changin’ their minds for liberal scum, praise Jesus.

But many of the religious people who refuse to believe they came from some damn monkey are ALSO gross crusty olds who are gonna die soon, whereas Kids These Days?

Not so religious:

Who are the people still perpetuating the view that evolution is a myth and that humans have existed basically as-is for the entirety of existence, which has lasted only about 10,000 years? By and large, they’re older Americans. About 34 percent of Americans 50 to 64 years old believe in creationism. For Americans older than 65, it’s 37 percent. From the perspective of people who endorse evolution, that’s a good thing—because, not to be insensitive, but old people die.

And when they’re gone, millennials will be free to keep sexting each other about how cool evolution is.



http://wonkette.com/596231/dumb-millennials-dont-even-believe-jesus-rode-dinosaurs

 
legion troll do you know that troll face is super outdated by now? You need a new schitck. You are living in the past. I suggest you start following the fact path like my lovely daughter. Maybe one day you'll be as intelligent as her
 
Religion Among the Millennials


MILLENNIALS
This is part of a Pew Research Center series of reports exploring the behaviors, values and opinions of the teens and twenty-somethings that make up the Millennial generation.
By some key measures, Americans ages 18 to 29 are considerably less religious than older Americans. Fewer young adults belong to any particular faith than older people do today. They also are less likely to be affiliated than their parents’ and grandparents’ generations were when they were young. Fully one-in-four members of the Millennial generation – so called because they were born after 1980 and began to come of age around the year 2000 – are unaffiliated with any particular faith. Indeed, Millennials are significantly more unaffiliated than members of Generation X were at a comparable point in their life cycle (20% in the late 1990s) and twice as unaffiliated as Baby Boomers were as young adults (13% in the late 1970s). Young adults also attend religious services less often than older Americans today. And compared with their elders today, fewer young people say that religion is very important in their lives.
 
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