Well, I thought it was pretty accurate.
1. Conservative Protestant (98%)
2. Eastern Orthodox (74%)
3. Roman Catholic (74%)
4. Latter-day Saint (Mormon) (73%)
5. Orthodox Quaker (73%)
6. Seventh Day Adventist (72%)
7. Islam (65%)
8. Orthodox Judaism (65%)
9. Liberal Protestant (64%)
10. Jehovah's Witness (62%)
11. Bahá'í (57%)
12. Christian Science (Church of Christ, Scientist) (49%)
13. Sikhism (42%)
14. Liberal Quaker (41%)
15. Reform Judaism (36%)
16. Mahayana Buddhism (31%)
17. Theravada Buddhism (31%)
18. Jainism (31%)
19. Hinduism (30%)
20. New Thought (29%)
21. Unitarian Universalism (29%)
22. Atheism and Agnosticism (26%)
23. Scientology (26%)
24. Neo-Paganism (16%)
25. New Age (14%)
26. Taoism (12%)
27. Secular Humanism (11%)
Reading this thread, I didn't realize Unitarians had such a "following." I recently attended a play at a Unitarian church and decided to read thier statement of belief, which stated that they refuse to be limited by statements of belief. It seems, overall, that they firmly believe that firm beliefs are divisive and counter-productive.
I'm not insulting the religion, I just don't understand how people can be part of something that outwardly contradicts itself.
BTW, I'm not trying to start a flame war and I'm not saying that those of you who drew the "Unitarian Universalism" stick actually identify with the religion, I'm just honestly curious.