
given that all the questions directly or indirectly related to Islam, and that most of the surveys were conducted in countries with an overwhelming muslim majority, I'm not sure why they would question non Muslims. It was explicitly and overtly research into views held by Muslims mainly in the muslim world.
( , Sat 14 Feb 2015, 19:29, Reply)

argument that Islam is somehow different to other religions, then it would be relevant to compare data.
I suspect the Christian attitude to homosexuality wouldn't be particularly liberal, especially in places like Uganda.
( , Sat 14 Feb 2015, 20:11, Reply)

But unless you have a regional baseline to compare it with (a cultural norm), you cannot point to any particular opinion and blame Islamic influence for it.
( , Sat 14 Feb 2015, 20:35, Reply)