Al Gore, call your distributor

Al Gore has a lot of work to do. According to the new Pew Global Attitudes Project survey, 47 percent of Americans are only a little or not at all concerned about global warming, the highest number for all the countries questioned. The poll is the usual fascinating collection of data. A majority of Americans ...

Al Gore has a lot of work to do. According to the new Pew Global Attitudes Project survey, 47 percent of Americans are only a little or not at all concerned about global warming, the highest number for all the countries questioned.

Al Gore has a lot of work to do. According to the new Pew Global Attitudes Project survey, 47 percent of Americans are only a little or not at all concerned about global warming, the highest number for all the countries questioned.

The poll is the usual fascinating collection of data. A majority of Americans and Brits remain confident that the effort to bring democracy to Iraq will succeed. The Chinese are apparently the most satisfied people on earth. Blair remains the most popular world leader in the United States and Indians remain keen on Bush. (Indeed, the numbers bear out Anne Applebaum's argument about who the pro-Americans are.) But who are the 16 percent of Brits who have confidence in the Holocaust-denying president of Iran to do the right thing?

James Forsyth is assistant editor at Foreign Policy.

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