In a recent YouGov survey, Americans revealed their crying habits across various circumstances. The survey found that 54% of respondents would be very or somewhat likely to cry over death. In contrast, only 17% admitted they would cry when feeling embarrassed. The data showed a notable gender difference: more women than men reported being likely to cry in most situations. The largest gender gaps appeared in responses to stress, arguments, and failure. Specifically, women were more likely to cry in these scenarios than men. These findings are based on self-reported data, reflecting what people are willing to admit about their emotional responses.
Source: flowingdata.com

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RAW EGG NATIONALIST
@Babygravy9
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Feb 1
Excess deaths among young adults (25-44) in the US is now 70% higher than what it would have been if pre-2011 trends had continued. It’s not just the pandemic that’s to blame either. So what is going on?
YouGov America
@YouGovAmerica
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Apr 16
Economist/YouGov Poll, Apr 13-15
% of U.S. adult citizens who think the following pay too much | too little in taxes
The wealthy 9% | 65%
The middle class 59% | 5%
The poor 53% | 9%
https://today.yougov.com/politics/articles/52035-donald-trump-job-approval-economy-stocks-tariffs-taxes-budget-april-13-15-2025-economist-yougov-poll…
Dr. Angie Stones
@DrAngieStones1
·
Apr 12
#YAGD (You’re All Gonna Die):
Aging causes ~100,000 deaths every day. That’s a 9/11 every 90 minutes.We spend billions fighting rare diseases, but pennies fighting aging—the root cause.Longevity research isn’t moving fast enough.
YouGov America
@YouGovAmerica
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Apr 16
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% of U.S. adult citizens who say that financially, compared to a year ago, they and their family are…
Better off: 15%
About the same: 45%
Worse off: 35%
https://d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/econTabReport_wmD8f2B.pdf#page=51…