I am driven to write these posts by the common criticisms against our movement. I will focus specifically on two:
- Atheists do not experience major prejudice and discrimination in the United States.
- Although atheists may experience some measure of prejudice and discrimination, it is not as extreme or openly codified into our government and culture, as it was against blacks, and therefore we have no right to call their fight a “civil rights movement” (a mostly emotional argument made by many African Americans, especially those who experienced the civil rights movement first hand).
The first argument, which this first of two posts is concerned with, has no truth whatsoever. It is simply an attempt to whitewash the entire issue. There have, throughout American history, and are still today many examples of discrimination, and most certainly bigotry against atheists. Although it is not my purpose in this post to give a ton of examples (that’s this entire blog’s mission, isn’t it?), only one is needed to show that claim is patently false – that there is, in fact discrimination against the nonreligious codified into government. Many states still technically require a religious test for public office, which is blatantly unconstitutional. They don’t require any specific religious beliefs, only that one asserts a belief in some supernatural deity. This clearly singles out only the nonreligious, barring them from state public office1. These states are:
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- Religious discrimination in U.S. State Constitutions. http://www.religioustolerance.org/texas.htm ↩