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Is the World Better for Gay People Than It Was 10 Years Ago?

Half of the world's adults (50%) now say their city or area is a "good place" for gay and lesbian people to live -- a figure that has doubled over the past decade and represents a new high in Gallup World Poll's trend dating back to 2005.

Americans Say Birth Control, Divorce Most 'Morally Acceptable'

Birth control and divorce remain the most morally acceptable of 19 issues measured, and extramarital affairs and cloning humans the most morally wrong.

Same-Sex Marriage Support Inches Up to New High of 71%

Seventy-one percent of Americans say they support legal same-sex marriage, a new high in Gallup's trend.

Personal Religiosity and Attitudes Toward Abortion

Americans' personal religiosity is significantly related to their abortion attitudes, even after controlling for religious and political identity and other demographic variables.

Listening to People: Key to Building a Strengths-Based Culture

Learn how listening to others and appreciating the unique lens through which they see the world can enhance your efforts to build and sustain a strengths-based culture.

How to Improve Your Wellbeing With Belief®

Learn how to apply your CliftonStrengths theme of Belief to move your wellbeing -- and the wellbeing of the people in your life -- to a place of thriving.

LGBT Americans Married to Same-Sex Spouse Steady at 10%

Gallup finds that 10% of LGBT adults in the U.S. are married to a same-sex spouse, and another 6% live with a same-sex partner.

Think Like a Strengthspreneur®: Growing Your Coaching Business

Strengths coaches are entrepreneurs. Learn from an experienced coach how to develop your unique niche in coaching and help your coaching business endure.

Religion and Wellbeing in the U.S.: Update

New Gallup data add evidence for the long-established connection between individual religiosity and wellbeing in the U.S.

Is America Losing Its Religion?

Jack Jenkins, national reporter for the Religion News Service, joins the podcast to discuss the decline of religious importance and affiliation in the U.S.
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