I wasn't trying to make a point with that first thing. It's just statistics. I'm a big believer that the phrase "close enough" should come with an margin of error.
And if you want to believe this a pressing issue, fine by me. I will say, however, that you reminded me just now of a debate I went to recently. The topic was a question, "What will the most pressing issue in the 2014 elections be?". Everyone had their own argument; one said the NSA, another said Global Warning, and when I got up I looked at everyone and told them they were ridiculous. I said they had let their own opinions decide, rather then what reality said. They were going off about Global Warming or whatever their particular issue was, but the fact was the election would, more or less, turn on Obamacare. It didn't matter that it might not have been the most pressing issue, but it was the issue people cared most about. I begged them to remember that the real question was not, in fact, what they, personally was cared most about, or what they wished would be the most important, but what was actually going to be the biggest issue. You tell me those on death row care. I'm sure they do. But if I was a public policy maker, the 33 lives of murdered killed a year wouldn't rank as by biggest priority. Oh, and 4%? That calculates out to 1.3 innocents killed a year. On the grand scale of things, and the millions of innocent people left behind, it's safe to say this is emotional first. I'm sure it's big for the ones involved, but so is everything else.
Besides, evidence doesn't work. Many people, both here and in general, are under the erroneous impression that in a competition between the right and wrong answers, where both are equal, right always wins. This has been proved to be untrue, and in fact, evidence to the contrary actually hardens people's positions. They cherry-pick. They ignore. Disconfirmation bias refers to people's tendency to over-criticize evidence which contradicts them (if I came into here with a study saying the death penalty did good, I'm sure only people who don't care and people who support the death penalty would recognize it's value, the visa versa is also true.). People cannot be simply exposed to the light of knowledge and let things work themselves out. In the end, rhetoric and presentation matters more. But even then, I'm not talking about mere "opinions". I'm talking about the little fundamentals, the things that make you become a libertarian rather then a republican. Those cannot be changed without a herculean effort. They can be perverted, and you can make someone believe things that greatly contradict them, but they are a function of personality first, and few if any arguments have ever been so clever as to change a person's personality.