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Senior Citizens Much More Critical on Moral Questions, Except Marital Affairs

But they don't like marijuana, drinking, gambling are sex if not married

By Tucker Sutherland, editor

 

Seniors Much More Judgmental - Usually

 
 

This graph represents the difference between the percentage of seniors and all adults that find these activities morally wrong.

 
 

 
 

Percent Saying This is "Morally Wrong"

  All
adults
Seniors 65+ Diff
Smoking marijuana 50 74 24
Drinking alcohol excessively 61 80 19
Sex between unmarried adults 35 54 19
Gambling 35 52 17
Homosexual behavior 50 60 10
Not reporting all income on your taxes 79 88 9
Overeating 32 40 8
Telling a lie to spare someone’s feelings 43 50 7
Having an abortion 52 50 -2
Married people having an affair 88 83 -5
 

March 29, 2006 – It would not be a good idea to come around senior citizens smoking marijuana, drinking too much, having sex if unmarried or gambling. Seniors are much more critical of these activities than are younger people. On the other hand, if married people have an affair or you have an abortion, seniors are more forgiving, according to results from a new survey by the Pew Research Center.

Survey respondents were read a list of ten behaviors and asked whether, in their personal opinion, each one is "morally acceptable, morally wrong, or not a moral issue."

(See responses to all questions by gender and age below this story.)

Senior citizens age 65 and over were more disapproving of these behaviors than younger people on eight of the 10 questions.

The survey, by design, covered a wide range of activities, in part to avoid signaling to respondents that inclusion on the list was meant to convey a presumption of moral unacceptability.

The activity that drew the most widespread moral disapproval, 88%, was "married people having an affair" Surprisingly, the senior citizens were the least critical of all the age groups, with 83% disapproval.

The one that drew the least disapproval was "overeating" - although a sizable minority (32%) said that activity was morally wrong. Seniors were substantially more disapproving, with 40% finding gluttony morally wrong..

The survey did not measure intensity of feelings. It's possible, therefore, that the difference between the 79% who say it's morally wrong to cheat on one's taxes and the 88% who say the same about cheating on one's spouse is greater (or smaller) than those numbers indicate.

 
 

Judgments about right-and-wrong are by nature profound, and - in real life - often nuanced and situational. By contrast, this survey questionnaire is a blunt instrument, according to the researchers.

Even so - and in admittedly coarse strokes - the alignment of responses to the ten questions paints an interesting portrait of contemporary American morality.

About that 1040

As April 15 approaches and tens of millions of Americans prepare their tax returns, they may be interested to know that eight-in-ten of their fellow citizens (79%) consider not reporting all income on one's taxes to be morally wrong, while just 5% consider it morally acceptable and 14% say it's not a moral issue.

This question drew the strongest disapproval from seniors, with an 88% disapproval. Maybe it shows the value seniors place on the tax-funded programs of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

Moral disapproval is one thing, behavior another. Earlier this year the IRS reported that in 2001 (the last year for which it had conducted such research) there was a gross "tax gap" of $345 billion, resulting from an overall non-compliance rate of about 16 percent. Of that gap, the biggest missing slice, some $197 billion, was from underreporting of income on individual income tax returns; most of that missing sum, in turn, resulted from underreporting of business income on those individual returns, the IRS found.

About a Different Kind of Cheating

The only behavior on the Pew list that draws more moral condemnation than cheating on one's taxes is cheating on a spouse. Some 88% say it is morally wrong for married people to have an affair, while 3% say it is morally acceptable and 7% say it is not a moral issue.

It is hard to explain, but seniors were considerably less critical on this, with only 83% finding in morally wrong. And, a strong 9% said it is not even a moral issue.

Here again, condemnation is one thing, behavior another. The General Social Survey (which is funded by the National Science Foundation) has been asking about adulterous behavior in numerous surveys since 1991.In 2004, it finds that 15% percent of those ever married say that they have had sex outside of their marriage, and that more (currently or formerly married) men (20%) than women (12%) report this behavior. (Needless to say, on a topic as sensitive as adultery, it is possible that people are not always honest when asked in a survey questionnaire about their personal behavior).

 

Related Stories

 
 

Senior Citizens Less Tolerant of Mixed-Race Dating

Baby Boomer approval is right above the national average at 77 percent

March 20, 2006 – Although 22 percent of all American adults say that they have a close relative who is married to someone of a different race, and 76 percent of Americans see no problems with blacks and whites dating, senior citizens are far behind the tolerance curve. Only half of those who were adults during World War II agree interracial dating is okay. Read more...

Read more General Features

 

In the Pew survey, there are also some gender differences in moral judgments about adultery. Some 90% of women, compared with 85% of men, say adultery is morally wrong. Men (3%) are no more inclined than women (2%) to say it is morally acceptable, but 10 percent of men say extra-marital sex is "not a moral issue," compared with just 5% of women who feel that way.

Men and Women, Young and Old Differ On Abortion and Homsexuality

Two moral issues that have had the greatest political resonance in recent years - homosexuality and abortion - divide the broad public in almost exactly the same way, but are seen differently by some sub-groups in the population.

Men are more morally disapproving than women of homosexuality, but both genders have similar views about abortion. Likewise, the old and the young judge the morality of these two behaviors in different ways. On the question of homosexuality, the old are more disapproving than the young. But on the question of abortion, there is no clear difference between the old and the young.

Catholics are more disapproving of abortion than they are of homosexuality. Married people are more disapproving of abortion than are those not currently married, but there is no clear difference between the married and unmarried on homosexuality.

Despite these sub-group differences, the two behaviors wind up being judged in nearly identical ways by the full population.

About half of those surveyed say abortion (52%) and homosexual behavior (50%) are morally wrong, while an identical 12% say that each of these activities is morally acceptable. Another one in three (33%) say homosexuality is "not a moral issue." Some 23% also say that about abortion, with an additional 11% volunteering an answer to the effect that "it depends on the situation." (Of all ten behaviors tested, abortion drew the most volunteered responses of that nature.)

Differences by Age, Income, Religiosity, Ideology and Party Line Up with Differing Responses

These are the some of the traits associated with responses to the battery of ten questions, according to the researchers:

     The groups with a majority saying that eight or more of the behaviors are morally wrong include: conservatives, frequent church-goers; white evangelical Christians, and those ages 65 and older.

    Majorities of three groups - weekly church-goers, white evangelical Christians and those ages 65 and older - say that nine of the 10 behaviors are morally wrong. Among these groups, overeating is the only behavior not judged by a majority to be morally wrong.

    Groups with a majority saying that no more than two of these behaviors are morally wrong include college graduates, people with family incomes of at least $75,000 a year, and people who seldom or never attend religious services. For all those groups, adultery and income tax cheating are the only two behaviors that a majority judge to be morally wrong.

    There is a partisan divide in how people judge these behaviors. A majority of Republicans say seven of the ten behaviors are morally wrong; while a majority of Democrats and independents say just three of the behaviors (adultery, underreporting taxable income; drinking excessively) are morally wrong. Independents are the least inclined of the three partisan groups to view the behaviors as morally wrong and most prone to see them as "not a moral issue."

    Some demographic factors - including gender and marital status - are not strongly correlated with views on these questions. However, there is regional pattern in the responses, with Southerners more likely than people living in the Northeast or West, and slightly more likely than those living in the Midwest, to describe the 10 behaviors as morally wrong. There are too few respondents in the survey for a substantive analysis by race and ethnicity.

    People who decline to call a behavior morally wrong don't necessarily believe it is morally acceptable. In fact, for all ten items on the list, those who say a behavior is "not a moral issue" outnumber those who say it is morally acceptable, generally by a sizable margin. A majority of all adults (58%) believe that overeating is "not a moral issue," while pluralities say this about gambling (42%) and sex between unmarried adults (37%).

Next, I’m going to read some behaviors. For each, please tell me whether you personally believe that it is morally acceptable, morally wrong, or is it not a moral issue.

 

Morally
wrong

Morally
acceptable

Not a
moral issue

Depends

Don't
Know

 

%

%

%

%

%

Having Abortion

All adults

52

12

23

11

2

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

54

13

21

10

2

Women

50

11

24

12

3

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

53

12

26

7

2

50-64

48

14

20

15

3

65+

50

9

17

21

3

Married People Having an Affair

All adults

88

3

7

1

1

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

85

3

10

2

 

Women

90

2

5

2

1

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

89

2

7

1

1

50-64

89

3

6

1

1

65+

83

4

9

3

1

Homosexual Behavior

All adults

50

12

33

1

4

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

58

9

29

1

3

Women

43

15

36

2

4

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

48

13

36

*

3

50-64

51

11

33

3

2

65+

60

10

19

3

8

Drinking Alcohol Excessively

All adults

61

5

31

2

1

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

59

7

31

2

1

Women

63

3

31

2

1

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

55

5

37

2

1

50-64

64

4

28

2

2

65+

80

3

15

2

*

Gambling

All adults

35

17

42

3

3

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

33

20

42

3

2

Women

38

13

43

3

3

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

30

19

45

3

3

50-64

33

13

48

3

3

65+

52

15

27

3

3

Not Reporting All Income on Your Taxes

All adults

79

5

14

1

1

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

79

3

16

1

1

Women

79

6

13

1

1

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

74

6

18

1

1

50-64

83

3

12

2

*

65+

88

3

6

2

1

Sex Between Unmarried Adults

All adults

35

22

37

2

4

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

36

23

35

3

3

Women

35

20

39

2

4

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

30

26

40

2

2

50-64

35

19

37

5

4

65+

54

10

27

2

7

Telling a Lie to Spare Someone’s Feelings

All adults

43

23

26

6

2

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

43

22

27

6

2

Women

42

25

24

7

2

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

42

26

28

3

1

50-64

39

21

25

11

4

65+

50

19

18

9

4

Overeating

All adults

32

6

58

3

1

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

32

7

55

4

2

Women

31

5

60

3

1

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

29

5

61

3

2

50-64

32

6

57

3

2

65+

40

7

48

4

1

Smoking Marijuana

All adults

50

10

35

4

1

Gender

 

 

 

 

 

Men

51

10

35

3

1

Women

50

10

35

4

1

Age

 

 

 

 

 

18-49

44

11

41

3

1

50-64

51

8

33

6

2

65+

74

6

16

3

1


About the Pew Social Trends Reports

The Pew social trends reports explore the behaviors and attitudes of Americans in key realms of their lives - family, community, health, finance, work and leisure. Reports analyze changes over time in social behaviors and probe for differences and similarities between key sub-groups in the population.

The surveys are conducted by the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan "fact tank" that provides information on the issues, attitudes and trends shaping America and the world.

Survey reports are the result of the collaborative effort of the social trends staff, which consists of:

Paul Taylor, Executive Vice President
Cary Funk, Senior Project Director
Peyton Craighill, Project Director

PDF Download the complete report for topline results

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