I think there's a big difference in what it means to be religious in the US and rest of the developed world. Extremely few people in EU are religious (at least as long we mean Christian) in a way that passes for "religious" in the US. So you should interpret results with care.
I personally voted "yes" without a bit of doubt, but i understand in the US i'd be probably labelled as "none".
I sometimes find religious or spiritual concepts useful as abstractions for describing aspects of life in our complex world, but I don't take them literally.
I think that my values and motivations are basically those of a spiritual person, and if I lived in some past era I might have become a priest. In the present, though, I am just an atheist who cares a lot about community and social justice.
Couldn’t there be different kinds of “higher power”? Our greatest mistakes lie in our expectations, for they obscure and misattribute those actual things we could not anticipate.
Only about text editors
Militant Agnostic.
> whether people are opposed to a higher power or if it's actually something that makes them reflect and see that there must be a creator.
I think that's a false dichotomy. Most people who are atheist are not "opposed to a higher power" at all. You have to think something exists to be opposed to it.