Utahns recognize threat but refuse to be cowed
But that fear won't stop them from welcoming and attending the Games next February.
In a new Deseret News-KSL TV poll conducted by Dan Jones & Associates, 59 percent of those questioned said it was very likely or somewhat likely a terrorist attack would be directed at the 2002 Winter Games.
Deseret News graphic Deseret News-KSL TV poll / Wirthlin poll Requires Adobe Acrobat. |
Among the confident is 2nd District Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, who said security planning "has always been a priority," even before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center.
"If we were to let terrorist threats interfere with an event that celebrates nations of the world coming together in peaceful competition, then the terrorists win," he said.
Some 92 percent of those questioned in the Deseret News poll said the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in Washington, D.C., and New York would not change their plans to attend free or ticketed Olympic events.
In a Deseret News/KSL-TV poll conducted by Dan Jones & Associates the day of the terror attacks, 26 percent of Utahns said they were much less or somewhat less likely to attend Olympic events. By Sept. 26, only 8 percent said the attacks had altered their plans to attend the Games.
Utahns' attitudes toward terrorism mirror similar polls conducted nationally. The Deseret News poll found that 65 percent said recent terrorist attacks had shaken their own personal sense of safety and security, either somewhat or a great deal.




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