About 6 percent of respondents said they had, five times the national average.
More than 22 percent of respondents in the 55-to-64 age group said they would have to work longer.
A third of the respondents said they were not yet able to make a choice.
Some 85 percent of respondents said they always had enough to eat.
And 60 percent of respondents said the war has not been worth the cost.
Of the respondents, 53 percent said the government should not back an attack on Iraq.
Less than 50 percent of the respondents reported that they had training on the policy.
For example about 64% of respondents are younger than 34.
But only 3 percent of the respondents to the survey were women.
Three years ago, only 42 percent of the respondents agreed.