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57 Percent of Americans View Race Relations in US as Bad: Poll

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More than half of Americans view the state of race relations in the United States as bad, with 23 percent describing them as "very bad" following widespread protests sparked by grand jury decisions not to indict white police officers, who killed Michael Brown and Eric Garner.

MOSCOW, December 17 (Sputnik) – 57 percent of Americans said that race relations in the US are bad, according to a recent poll, conducted by the NBC News and the Wall Street Journal.

US President Barack Obama announced that the nation suffered from distrust between law enforcement and communities of color. - Sputnik International
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23 percent of respondents described race relations in the US as "very bad", according to NBC News. Only 40 percent of those, who took part in the survey, were optimistic on the issue. This is the lowest figure registered by the poll in almost two decades.

The survey results stand in marked contrast to views on race in the US just 18 months ago. In July 2013, 52 percent of Americans said race relations in the country were good.

However, the new findings are consistent with attitudes among African Americans, who made up 12 percent of respondents. In July 2013, 58 percent of African Americans said that race relations were bad, with only 38 percent disagreeing. Currently, these figures changed to 63 percent and 35 percent respectively.

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The figures reached an all-time high in 2009, after Barack Obama was elected US president, according to the Wall Street Journal. Back then, 77 percent considered race relations in the US to be good, while 22 percent though they were bad.

The recent findings match those of a NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey conducted in 1995 after O.J. Simpson, a once famous American football player, was acquitted in the double murder.

The survey comes at a time of widespread protests sparked by two separate grand jury decisions not to press criminal charges against white police officers, Darren Wilson and Daniel Pantaleo, who killed unarmed African Americans, 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson and Eric Garner in New York.

1,000 people took part in the poll conducted on December 10 – 14, 2014.

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