religions and incomes

May be the worst website I have ever visited. Was that put together by humans???

Anyway.....Is there a point?
 
Oh wait, it said AMERICA.... not world wide... now with that fact in mind, it makes sense to me. A lot of Hindu's I know are wealthy.
 
Oh wait, it said AMERICA.... not world wide... now with that fact in mind, it makes sense to me. A lot of Hindu's I know are wealthy.

I only know 3 or 4 and they do well.......The one's I know don't spend a dime. I know two that are brothers....they live together with their wives in one house....a table for computers,table for dinner and a couch is all the furniture they have and they drive really really old cars. They are both engineers.
 
I'm trying to figure out the point of this transparency. It looks like raw data with no correlation to anything. :dunno:

Also, it's appearance is somewhat deceiving because the religion categories don't indicate what percentage of the overall population each group is. The chart makes it appear that they're all equal in population.

How do the atheists and agnostics stack up with these?

It's not very informative.
 
I'm trying to figure out the point of this transparency. It looks like raw data with no correlation to anything. :dunno:

Also, it's appearance is somewhat deceiving because the religion categories don't indicate what percentage of the overall population each group is. The chart makes it appear that they're all equal in population.

How do the atheists and agnostics stack up with these?

It's not very informative.

Are you talking about Crop Circles? ;)
 
I'm trying to figure out the point of this transparency. It looks like raw data with no correlation to anything. :dunno:

Also, it's appearance is somewhat deceiving because the religion categories don't indicate what percentage of the overall population each group is. The chart makes it appear that they're all equal in population.

How do the atheists and agnostics stack up with these?

It's not very informative.

Are you means that atheists and agnostics are not included in chart?
 
I'm trying to figure out the point of this transparency. It looks like raw data with no correlation to anything. :dunno:

Also, it's appearance is somewhat deceiving because the religion categories don't indicate what percentage of the overall population each group is. The chart makes it appear that they're all equal in population.

How do the atheists and agnostics stack up with these?

It's not very informative.

My interpretation is that each religion is given 100% and you divide by their income into percentages. That's all there is. How many of them practice one or other doesn't really matter in that case. For example, if 20% of Christians make 50,000 a year, you can easily deduce that for every 2 out of 10 Christians make that amount.
 
My interpretation is that each religion is given 100% and you divide by their income into percentages. That's all there is. How many of them practice one or other doesn't really matter in that case. For example, if 20% of Christians make 50,000 a year, you can easily deduce that for every 2 out of 10 Christians make that amount.

I would rather reduce my deduce to 1 out of 5
 
My interpretation is that each religion is given 100% and you divide by their income into percentages. That's all there is. How many of them practice one or other doesn't really matter in that case. For example, if 20% of Christians make 50,000 a year, you can easily deduce that for every 2 out of 10 Christians make that amount.
I know how to read the chart. My question is, what's the point?
 
I know how to read the chart. My question is, what's the point?

At first glance, I thought it was about the world and I thought, "No way that many Hindu's have much money" because of the illustration at the bottom that looked like earth but realized it's only in the USA, not worldwide.

But just fascinating tidbit about religion and income though.
 
My interpretation is that each religion is given 100% and you divide by their income into percentages. That's all there is. How many of them practice one or other doesn't really matter in that case. For example, if 20% of Christians make 50,000 a year, you can easily deduce that for every 2 out of 10 Christians make that amount.

It's not rocket science. If 20% of garbage truck drivers earn 50,000 a year, I could just as easily deduce that 2 out of 10 truck drivers earn that amount.
 


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