You’re gonna have to do it in my next interview. I’m not gonna lie. I’ll call you back when I get back from a trip.

The United States is in the midst of a debate over the future of its most populous nation the Middle East, where millions of people live in poverty and seek refuge amid a brutal Arab conflict. A survey by the Pew Research Center, released Sunday by the Public Religion Research Institute, found that Americans believe that the world is on the verge of war because it has fallen farther behind the world, largely because of international norms that apply to everyone.

Many Americans think international norms have created a disaster, said Susanne Moore, a co-author on the report with Robert T. Woodberry. She argues that if we are to change what’s considered human rights, such as the right to vote or the right to freedom of speech, that is critical to improving governance.

The Arab Spring and the fall in Egypt, for example, that led to civil wars and an uprising, changed how the United States was viewed in the Middle East, Moore said in a telephone interview published online Sunday by Pew. I’m sure that, in the end, that will change how the United States is viewed worldwide.

The Pew report’s findings are based on surveys from 11 countries in the Middle East, one for each country’s people. They are conducted in two parts of the world the United States and the Middle East.

The American surveys were conducted between 2003 and 2008 and include the views of 2,000 people from nine different countries. The Pew interviews were taken among U.S. adults who were asked about the questions about religious freedom, family responsibilities and political affiliation. The data will be used for a report commissioned by the Pew Charitable Trusts under Section 8 of the Endangered Species Act.

The survey also asked about the Middle East and Africa. It has been conducted nationally and internationally for three years, including for two of the nine questions.

Those surveyed said that the U.S. was too poor to protect its people from religious freedom in the region. They also were more likely than Americans of different faiths to believe that the rule of law applies to everyone.

The United States has too little respect for the rule of law in the region, Moore said in the interview. And even though we want to live a more humane, free, democratic world, that doesn’t happen in a free environment. And if there’s

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