LOL, at the usual Iranian twisting of reality. That reputation does not come out of nowhere it seems. Did you miss the crucial "if they did not use so much violence"? That basically changes the entire nature of the question to one about whether they support an Islamic state emerging among the Sunni Arab community in Syria and Iraq. Iran itself claims to be an Islamic state and is based on Islamic law apparently.
If Sunni Arabs in Iraq and Syria want to establish an Islamic state and govern themselves, why should they not be allowed to do that, just as Iranians apparently decided to become an Islamic state in 1979? It took violence for the Mullah's in Iran to gain power, stay in power and that will also be the case in the future.
All the Shia militias in Iraq who are fighting against ISIS want an Islamic state as well just a Shia one. They have in the past been ready to fight the central government to achieve that goal, rivals from within and non-Shia's. Today they are happy because the Iraqi regime is basically run by Shia Islamists so no need to rebel especially not as ISIS and the Kurds are the much greater enemy.
I personally would find it interesting to see how a non-expansionist Islamic State would do if given the chance to prosper and if governed correctly. If numerous Muslim nations from Africa to Asia can be ruled by Islamic law why not another state? It would be hypocritical of me and you to deny them this right if there was popular support.
You are extremely defensive. I'm not attacking Arabs. I'm finding fault with the survey.
There is two main concerns I have with the survey,
1) The complete data is not given, so we can see the breakdown of the answers given per country, as most reputable polls do (look at Pew's or Gallop's). When I looked at the particular example, I showed the great variance between two regions, therefore when there is a big variation, it will be more helpful to look at the smaller details to better understand the subject.
2) The questions are not professional opinion poll questions. Your own reply supports this assertion. Your post is about Arabs wanting an Islamic state. Okay, fine, then wouldn't you agree a separate question clearly asking that would have been helpful, such as,
"I could see myself supporting a non-violent system of governance that is modeled after Islam" or something similar, without any connection to Daesh. And then another question could be "I see myself supporting Daesh", so that we have a clear understanding of the Arab youth mentality.
Remember, your own post, in the first post, starts with "An overwhelming majority of young Arabs reject Daesh (ISIS)". Therefore the survey itself is using the findings to show the youth's attitude towards Daesh.
I'm sorry if you have an obsessive hate for Iranians, nothing I can do about that, but my post wasn't an attack on Arabs. I like reading scientific opinion polls, and I'm the sort of person who looks at the complete data, methodology, and questions asked. It's nothing personal.
For example, compare this survey with the following,
http://www.gallup.com/poll/120758/silatech-index-voices-young-arabs.aspx
It's from 2009, and I didn't go through the questions one by one, but I want you just compare the way the questions are presented (no fluff, very clear) and how the results are portrayed (per country and gender). Wouldn't you consider this a better approach to understanding the Arab youth?