The total votes on the poll is now at 47, here's the results on a graph so far [won't be recording it after this since the votes will no longer be truly blind]
I put in the two shades of the two extremes into the poll so that the people so heavily polarized or just being silly would have somewhere to vent without messing up the statistics, so it's the more central ones I find to be most useful. The extremes make up usually around a fifth to a quarter of the results, so I'm not sure if it CAN be ignored, but it is hard to reliably extrapolate much from it.
The first 13 votes are in Eurasian timezone hour, at 18 there's an intersection of daylight with American hour. At 35 to 47 we reach the intersection of Europe and American hour.
What I find rather interesting is that around 1PM in the lands of America, the opinion of impartiality being neutral experienced its only big significant drop and the opinion of right-wing bias experienced its most significant increase. In addition, the opinion of slight left-wing bias also dropped during this time and only recently picked up. During west Europe to East Asia hour the opinion of neutrality increased and then around Australia/Central Asia hour the votes mostly stopped coming in. Overall, as the votes continued coming in the central opinions surprisingly maintained roughly the same percentage range of votes [all rounded to the nearest integer]:
Heavy left-wing bias: 0-0%
Slight left-wing bias: 6-10%
No/little bias, neutral: 27-37%
Slight right-wing bias: 19-22%
Heavy right-wing bias: 9-15%
And for the results I'm not sure of, if they really represent a serious opinion:
Right-wing propaganda-tier bias: 15-23%
Extreme right-wing bias: 0-0%
Extreme left-wing bias: 0-5%
Left-wing propaganda tier: 4-8%
Things I find from these results:
- There is clearly a difference in how most of the world views this and how Americans view this.
- On the extreme scales, there are a significant amount of people who picked the most extreme right-wing option available. I an unclear of whether this option was picked because a fair chunk of voters genuinely believed what I wrote was as biased as fabrications on the level of hyper-extreme propaganda, or if it was picked by virtue of it being the most extreme right-wing option available. It does say either way that for some reason, a mighty fair share of people's reported opinions were that what I wrote was insanely biased to the right.
- No one questioned why I specifically added political alignment to the poll questioning just how impartial I was.
This forum largely consists of progressives and people who identify on the left of the economic spectrum, or with the liberal democrats on the American left|right spectrum. During American hour, only 4 people voted saying they thought the OP was impartial with no/little bias. The traditionally conservative or republican news stations, radios and public figures in America are the ones who profess that Zimmerman is innocent while the traditionally liberal democrat news stations, radios and public figures in America are the ones who profess that Zimmerman is a murderer, and that this case is about race. I doubt I'll be able to make the same kind of poll on any predominately right-wing forum if I could find one, but from these results it is suggesting it to me that in America this is treated as a political issue where Zimmerman's guilt is not being determined by facts, but by the political ideology of the people judging him, and that I was right in my hypothesis - around a quarter to just under three-quarters of people in this sample had already made up their minds about the trial; who was innocent and guilty, how zealous they were going to be about it - and no matter what their opinion of the case, the majority will still treat it like a political issue and see no issue of it.