Atheists Among Us

This article was published in the Washington Post’s On Belief blog, both print and online, on Saturday, July 23, 2011. The Post edited it for length. This is the unedited version.

Rick Wingrove

Atheist in America: I’m Just Sayin’

You know that guy down the street? Nice guy, about 50, IT consultant, first guy on the block to clear his walks and mailbox after every snow, fought in Desert Storm, keeps his yard immaculate, put two daughters through college, donates to the VFD and for breast cancer research, remodeled his own basement, and puts up a flag every 4th? That guy?

Well, that guy is an atheist. Not a communist, never been in jail, and doesn’t eat babies. Just an atheist, without all that other stuff. An atheist in America in the 21st century has nothing to do with the former Soviet Union. Nor, despite what you might hear in church about the degenerate character of an atheist, is he anymore likely to end up in prison than anyone else in the general population.

The new atheist is a different kind of animal that bears no resemblance to the villainous monsters the churches have warned us about for the last fifteen hundred years. The new atheist is no longer a social pariah, though a lot of political resistance and faith-based bigotry still exist.

Despite that, non-believers enjoy the full protection of the Constitution, and possess exactly the same rights as the most religious of Americans. Still, it took the advent of the internet for non-believers to find each other and to find their voice.

Largely as a result of the electronic emergence of the vocally irreligious, America’s religious makeup is changing rapidly. The American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS), conducted in 1990, 2001,and 2008, shows that America is trending rapidly away from Christianity, falling from 86% to 76% of the population in only 18 years.

One in four Americans is not a Christian. That’s 75 million Americans. Over 50 million of those claim no religious affiliation. ARIS refers to them as the “Nones”. This begs the question – how, exactly, is ‘atheist’ defined? Technically an atheist is simply someone who does not believe the ancient deities are real. That definition describes 12-15% of Americans, though only 1-2% refer to themselves as atheists. But, that is likely the result of fifteen hundred years of bad press.

The Nones (including non-believers and the unaffiliated), by the way, are the 3rd largest “religious” group in the survey, outnumbering Jews, Muslims, Mormons, Buddhists, Hindus, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and Southern Baptists combined. An additional irony is that even though 76% of Americans are nominally Christian, only 70% of Americans believe in a personal god. Go figure.

The average atheist in America is invisible. Many choose silence rather than upsetting their family, or for fear of losing their job, and most are not inclined to activism. That’s because ,for most of the last two thousand years, it was highly lethal to raise your hand when the question was asked.

But, atheists are everywhere. They are your family, friends, neighbors, co-workers, cops, doctors, businessmen, celebrities, and the guy who fixes your computer. They are educated, they raise families, they hold jobs, they are active in their communities, they play by the rules, and are generally happy to fly under the radar of the professional evangelizers. So, when you say you don’t know any atheists, what you are really saying is that you don’t know who the atheists are.

And that guy the cops frog marched out of his house last week at 3:00AM? He’s your five term representative who ran on family values and has a wide stance. His humiliating arrest, for purchasing meth from a gay prostitute, came as he was awaiting sentencing for tax evasion on income from a sweat shop in Saipan.

Well, that guy’s not an atheist. I’m just sayin’.

http://www.americanreligionsurvey-aris.org/

Rick Wingrove

A Small Victory

The Banner in Question

In March, even as Einstein was still sitting proudly on the lawn of the Loudoun County Courthouse in downtown Leesburg, I submitted an application to the county to put up our next display in April.  By luck, Thomas Jefferson has an April birthday. It just seemed ideal for our next exercise in free speech.

This morning my application was denied in a terse email from the county. Back to that in a minute.

As many of you know, Beltway Atheists is engaged in  a program I informally call Science on the Lawn, although it will inevitably include figures related to Separation. This all started before Christmas of 2009 when the county, fearing it would get sued, decided with the help of the ACLU, that if they wanted to keep the Nativity scene they had hosted for the last 40 years, they were going to have to let others put displays on the Courthouse lawn. So we did.

Free speech is a tricky thing, as the county has discovered. It turns out that certain elected officials were not counting on people, especially the atheist community, actually using it. And they seem less than enthusiastic about it now that we are actually taking advantage of it. For Christmas of 2010, the atheist community put up displays in 6 of the 10 available spots on the Courthouse lawn including the coveted corner spot where the nativity scene had always been set up.

Some local officials have made no secret of their disdain for our very presence. Prior to our Einstein display, another member, Larry M. and I attended a Grounds Committee meeting to observe the process and to make sure that no one was trying to screw us. Someone was trying to screw us. One member of the community clearly resented our presenced and seized on a technicality to try to deny us a permit. The technicality? We had not stated a specific numbered spot where we wanted to place our display. That was not an oversight – it was what we had been instructed to do by the county when there were applications for all of the spots. We were told not to ask for a specific spot because they would be handed out on a first come, firt served basis. Besides, there were no other applications for displays, so I wasnt competing agains anyone for a spot!

So when the surly board member tried to pull that , I quickly pulled out the extra copy of the application that I had brought with me, scribbled in a plot number and put it in his hands. Figuratively speaking, his head exploded. But we got our permit.

So anyway, this morning our permit for April was denied. I suspected that that might happen because there were other members of the Grounds committee who were also openly contemptuous of our assault on the regular order in the county. Another clue was when the contact for the Grounds committee emailed me a few day ago asking me to submit the content of our display in advance for consideration. I declined to do that. To do so would have been an agreement to censorship – a concession that the content was subject to the approval of people who had previously tried to prevent our participation.  The denial email stated the failure to submit content for approval as the reason for the denial.

So, I pulled out the General Rules on the county website. These are the rules the county agreed to and put into effect less than a year ago -  rules they grudgingly agreed to so that they could continue to invite the religious displays onto the lawn with legal coverage. And, just as I thought, the rules do not require anyone to submit their content for approval.

I immediately responded to the denial email, informing the county that the committee was once again seizing on a technicality to deny me permission to put up a display, but with one major difference: this technicality was not in the published rules.

I also wrote an appeal letter to be hand delivered to the office of the County Administrator the next day. As I carefully constructed a very grown up sounding appeal making my case point by point, I had no idea that it would never be delivered.

Late in the day, the Chairman of the Grounds committee called me at home. When I met him at the committee meeting  we attended, I immediately pegged him as a closet atheist and an ally. I was not mistaken. He told me that he wanted to help me get my permit through so that I could put up the Jefferson banner as requested in time for Tom’s birthday. He was going to walk it around to the other members and get it approved by the next day.

But, disappointingly,  he asked me to submit the contents of the banner for approval because it was the only way he would be able to get signoff from a mojority.

Just to put it behind us, Ioffered this compromise: I said I would, as a courtesy to the committee,  provide the text of the banner to him IF he would first get a statement from the committee acknowledging that what they were asking was not required by the rules.  The committee chairman said he would see if he could get some version of that statement agreed to by a majority.

Less than a half hour later, the chairman called me back and told me that I was correct, that I was absolutely NOT required to submit content for approval and that my permit had been approved.

If you are keeping score, that’s a clean win. Thomas Jefferson will go up as scheduled in April. This has been a very long day.

Christianist Douchebags in History

Adolph Hitler

If you have debated god-believers for more than 30 seconds, you have probably heard them claim that Hitler was an atheist. This assertion is, you might say, divergent from reality.  There are numerous examples of Hitlers religiosity. One of the most chilling is Hitler’s speech justifying the Nazi Enabling Act of 1933.

“By its decision to carry out the political and moral cleansing of our public life, the Government is creating and securing the conditions for a really deep and inner religious life. The advantages for the individual which may be derived from compromises with atheistic organizations do not compare in any way with the consequences which are visible in the destruction of our common religious and ethical values. The national Government sees in both Christian denominations the most important factor for the maintenance of our society. It will observe the agreements drawn up between the Churches and the provinces; their rights will not be touched. The Government, however, hopes and expects that the task of national and ethical renewal of our people, which it has set itself, will receive the same respect by the other side. The Government will treat all other denominations with objective and impartial justice. It cannot, however, tolerate allowing membership of a certain denomination or of a certain race being used as a release from all common legal obligations, or as a blank cheque for unpunishable behavior, or for the toleration of crimes. [The national Government will allow and confirm to the Christian denominations the enjoyment of their due influence in schools and education.] And it will be concerned for the sincere cooperation between Church and State. The struggle against the materialistic ideology and for the erection of a true people’s community (Volksgemeinschaft) serves as much the interests of the German nation as of our Christian faith. …The national Government, seeing in Christianity the unshakable foundation of the moral and ethical life of our people, attaches utmost importance to the cultivation and maintenance of the friendliest relations with the Holy See. …The rights of the churches will not be curtailed; their position in relation to the State will not be changed.” Adolph Hitler – 1933

The Nazis generated a crisis and then used that crisis to justify the suspension of democracy in Germany and the installation of Adolph Hitler as dictator. Once in power, the Nazis used the Enabling act to 1) kill the unions, 2) declare a christian nation, 3) discredit intellectuals, 4) redistribute all wealth upward, and 5)blame it on minorities. Kinda like what the republitard teabaggers are doing now.

Size Matters

Everyone knows that size counts. In more ways than one.

I have long argued that innumeracy – the mathematical analog to illiteracy – is responsible for a diminished ability to understand the workings of the universe and is largely responsible for the persistance of religion in an age of Science, Reason and Technology. It’s less about the ability to do long division than it is about understanding scale and relationships – if you can’t really comprehend the vastness of space, you have less ability to understand the proposterously mythological nature of the gods. And all that that implies.

I talk more about that in Size Counts – Permalink: http://www.atheistinamerica.com/essays/size-counts/

Anyway, maybe this video will help.

A Good Time To Be An Atheist in America

Church Sign

Atheists don't exist. - god

It’s a good time to be an Atheist in America. Or, at least, it could be worse.

Yes, we are vastly outnumbered by a deeply entrenched, well funded religious power structure, with friends in high places, a history of brutal oppression, and a spotty record for ever doing the right thing, that will do whatever it takes to hang on to their money, power, and privilege.

Yes, there are screeching televangelists and hyperbolic christianists who still tell their mindless minions that atheists are pure evil and the lowest form of life, steeped in depravity, devoid of morality, and doomed to eternal fiery damnation that they so richly deserve. Nor is it very difficult to find blogs populated with good solid xians who just want us dead and could not give less of a shit about our rights.

Yes, our elected officials are somewhere north of 98% xian and very happy to abandon their ethics to appease the worst elements of religion.

And, yes, there are still murderous theocracies on this planet where an atheist can lose a head in a soccer field.

Still, all things considered, we have it pretty good here in the US. Bear in mind that we were hunted for bounty for most of the last two millennia. But, at least here in America, and thanks to the foresight of the Founders, religion has been taken out of government and big religion no longer has a license to kill.

Despite the earnest wishes of the worst elements of religion, there are no blasphemy laws here. The First Amendment of our Constitution guarantees us free of speech and freedom from a government of priests and the corruption that is their legacy. The rights of Atheists are exactly equal to those of the most adamant god believers. And we have the right to question, criticize, lampoon, and disrespect religion as we see fit.

The Internet has played a key role in this Great Awakening. It has given Atheists a way to find each other. It has also provided a forum in which we can ask some very tough questions about religion, and where we can shine a very bright light on the numerous and fatal deficiencies of the xian mythology. And it has provided us the tools to begin to build a community and challenge  the unfettered power and influence of religion.

So, Atheists, suppressed for thousands of years, are now coming out in droves. And more will abandon their vestigial religious beliefs as more people get the message that it is OK to be an Atheist. It’s OK to be visible and vocal and to remind those plagued by Bronze Age superstitions that the rights of atheists are protected by our Constitution and are, in every way, equal to the most rabid god-believer. And there is not a fucking thing they can do about it.

Yes, there is still a long way to go, but it is a good time to be an Atheist in America.