No the WSJ never has coupons, and it only published Monday through Saturday.
2007-10-31 10:41:42
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answer #1
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answered by Marc G 6
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This article is not about atheists. The study talks about the irreligious (people who don't follow or believe in any established religion( who often just take bits and peices they like from all the religions plus their own immagination and have their own beliefe system) and liberal protestants and members of other loose and liberal denominations. Oh, and self proclaimed atheists, who prey and believe in a higher being, they may call themselves atheists, but they are not, they are confused. If you wanted to do a study of polar bears, and instead studied some people who were self proclaimed polar bears, you would not get accurate results about polar bears, you would get results about confused people. Evangelicles and right wing religious denominations do not believe in astrology and fortune telling, because they are told not to, it's against their religion, true atheists and other people with their heads screwed on the right way don't believe is that guff, because they have viewed what evidence or lack of, that there is and have come to the conclusion that it is nonsence based on their own thought proccesses. Because this study has actually only taken into account those people who are confused or who have made up their own beliefe system, and not proper atheists, and because it has only studied American society, the whims and fashions of a society can also have an effect on the popularity of the supernatural, this study falls apart, Statistics are only as accurate as the questions which are asked, and the range of people(in this case) who get asked the question, and in this instance the study is fatally flawed:)
2016-03-13 11:49:16
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answer #3
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answered by Heidi 3
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