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Almost certainly sample size issues. It's not cost efffective to try and break out Muslim Americans into specific groups, past basic demographic details. A problem you don't get with Christian groups at this point.
I'm comparing America to America. You don't get much more apples to apples than that in a discussion about American politics.
I feel like you haven't done your basic napkin math on the sample sizes required to break out the Muslim American population.
I understand the logistical issues completely. But those logistics still result in skewed data.
The solution, of course, is to "unsplinter" the Christian cohort. Then you would have an apples to apples comparison. That doesn't mean that the splintered data isn't worth collecting or looking at. Just that it's only really useful as an in-group investigation of different subsets of Christians. For the broader comparison across religions, you need to zoom out on Christians to match the sort of data (like to like) that you are using for Muslims and Buddhists. Otherwise you have skewed data.
I hope that makes sense.
I feel like the larger point you are attempting to make is one I agree with: People aren't always so easy to pin down by demographic and, as such, it's ignorant to paint all Muslims with the same brush as some Muslims are actually more tolerant than some Christians. But the data you've used to illustrate that point is faulty.