Secular Discrimination Report

Exposing the pervasive discrimination and prejudice against the nonreligious.

Being Atheist in the Bible Belt

Tags: , , ,

Russell Varner, a junior Journalism major at Elon University in North Carolina has written a great article on the difficulties of being openly atheist in the United States, focusing mostly on North Carolina and the culture at his school.  It’s well written, and I don’t think he misses any of the major points that should be touched on.

Excerpts:

“I think atheists, as well as agnostics or folks of other religious convictions other than Christianity for that matter, are disliked because so many ‘Christians’ in the south equate patriotism with belief in God,” said Tripp York, a professor of religious studies at Elon. “There is much confusion in the minds of many North American Christians as to the God they claim to worship and the tribal god established by the civil religion inherent within this nation-state. To deny belief in this god is synonymous, for many, as a form of anti-patriotism.

[sic]

“Not only are atheists the least trusted minority in America, but gays have been trying to be liberated for almost 30 years,” said William. “They have had a long time to acclimate the populace towards homosexuals and the majority of the populace is now willing to treat them as people. The fact that we are talking about true gay marriage in the mainstream rather than how AIDS and vigilantes will kill all of the gays on the news shows this. That’s why I do indeed think that it is harder to come out Atheist rather than gay in the South.”

“Ten or twenty years ago, if you came out gay, your students would see you differently and you’d be afraid the administration would see you differently and there’d be a different acceptance of you on campus, and I’m seeing a real parallel with this,” said an Elon professor who asked to remain anonymous for this article. “Since the topic of my sabbatical research (atheists in the South) became public, people have come to me out of the woodwork saying ‘I’m glad you’re working on that because I’ve always felt uncomfortable here.’”

Click the link.  Read the rest of the article.  This is the kind of insightful writing we need out of our new crop of young journalists.

© 2009 Secular Discrimination Report. All Rights Reserved.

This blog is powered by Wordpress and Magatheme by Bryan Helmig.