Do a lot of Asians seem to be Christian conservatives?

<p>Indians aren't generally regarded as asians in america. I forgot that :)</p>

<p>Yes, Lane from Gilmore Girls. :D</p>

<p>^^^ Lane's mother ;)</p>

<p>Oh, whoops, her mother not her. :)</p>

<p>Remember the way she'd put the posters on her mother's route home so she'd think she put them all around the town? Though you'd think her mother's route would encompass the WHOLE town because it's tiny. :)</p>

<p>Jews are usually democrats because of their history of social oppression. Democrats are known to be the party of race and gender rights, social equality.</p>

<p>The main reasons that there are a lot of evangelical Christians are: 1.) There are a lot of evangelical missionaries in Asia and thus most of the churches in Asia are evangelical, if not Catholic and 2.) Evangelical churches actively seek to increase membership in the United States 3.) Many Asians from places such as communist China lacked religion or spirituality or even reflections on humanity growing up and religion answers a lot of questions that they found unfulfilled in childhood</p>

<p>Most of the Asians I knew growing up were both highly educated (engineers, PhDs) and conservative Christians. A lot of them were both economically pro-capitalism and socially conservative: against affirmative action, used to "structured" traditional society.</p>

<p>People who go into academia tend to be liberal, but people who go to business school tend to be conservative. This is admittedly perhaps a biased point of view, but this is probably because conservatives tend to stereotypically be more practical and liberals go with the tides, not saying one is better than the other. For example, in social movements, conservatives tend to stick to strict definitions of citizenship and rights while liberals tend to sway with cultural change.</p>

<p>Oops. There were three pages of stuff.</p>

<p>Also, people tend to be most liberal and non-religious at around college age and humans are highly influenced by their surroundings, whether or not you want to admit it. College campuses tend to be a liberal bubble and professors aren't infallible: they're influenced by their surroundings, too.</p>

<p>Many of my Asian friends in Atlanta, especially my Chinese friends, are more conservative than I am and are Christians.</p>

<p>I don’t know why. Most of them are like me in that our parents emigrated from the People’s Republic of China.</p>

<p>In any case, they are among the most devout Christians I have ever met. They always say grace before they eat, and what’s more, they do it privately. There’s none of the ostentatious prayer that Jesus decried in the New Testament.</p>

<p>I’m glad that my parents didn’t force religion on me as a child. I’ve read the Qur’an and the New Testament, and I’m proud to be a-religious.</p>