Skepticism about Faith
Over a decade ago, Richard Rorty published an incisive review essay on Stephen Carter’s second book, The Culture of Disbelief: How American Law and Politics Trivialize Religious Devotion. The essay is titled “Religion as Conversation-stopper,” and in it, Rorty registers his disbelief at the idea that there is a culture of disbelief in the United States:
Carter puts in question what, to atheists like me, seems the happy, Jeffersonian compromise that the Enlightenment reached with the religious. This compromise consists in privatizing religion -- keeping it out of what Carter calls “the public square,” making it seem bad taste to bring religion into discussions of public policy. . . . We atheists, doing our best to enforce Jefferson’s compromise, think it bad enough that we cannot run for public office without being disingenuous about our disbelief in God; despite the compromise, no uncloseted atheist is likely to get elected anywhere in the country. We also resent the suggestion that you have to be religious to have a conscience -- a suggestion implicit in the fact that only religious conscientious objectors to military service go unpunished. Such facts suggest to us that the claims of religion need, if anything, to be pushed back still further, and that religious believers have no business asking for more public respect than they now receive.
I’ve recently filed my copy of this essay under “More Important Than Ever,” now that the latest Gallup poll on such matters has shown that American voters’ level of support for a hypothetical atheist president has doubled since 1959 but actually declined between 1999 and 2007, from 49 to 45 percent. Moreover, the poll shows that Americans would sooner vote for a zombie or the GEICO caveman than an atheist:
Between now and the 2008 political conventions, there will be discussion about the qualifications of presidential candidates -- their education, age, religion, race, and so on. If your party nominated a generally well-qualified person for president who happened to be …, would you vote for that person?OK, so maybe I made up two of the items in that poll. But you get my point, I’m sure. Now here’s the next point: when you break down the numbers by political ideology, you find exactly what you’d expect: 67 percent of liberals would vote for an atheist, 48 percent of moderates, 29 percent of conservatives. So it’s no surprise when conservatives call for greater respect for religion in public life, or when Mitt Romney says that “a man of faith” should occupy the White House. But it always seems to me that something curious is going on when liberals and progressives and Democrats take up the same complaint, something more than just your usual arguments about competing for swing voters and trying not to piss people off unnecessarily. Let me explain, by way of returning to Rorty’s review:
Yes No Catholic 95 4 Black 94 5 Jewish 92 7 A woman 88 11 Hispanic 87 12 Mormon 72 24 Married for the third time 67 30 72 years of age 57 42 A homosexual 55 43 A zombie 51 48 The GEICO caveman 47 50 An atheist 45 53
The main reason religion needs to be privatized is that, in political discussion with those outside the relevant religious community, it is a conversation-stopper. Carter is right when he says:One good way to end a conversation -- or to start an argument -- is to tell a group of welleducated professionals that you hold a political position (preferably a controversial one, such as being against abortion or pornography) because it is required by your understanding of God’s will.Saying this is far more likely to end a conversation that to start an argument. The same goes for telling the group, “I would never have an abortion” or, “Reading pornography is about the only pleasure I get out of life these days.” In these examples, as in Carter’s, the ensuing silence masks the group’s inclination to say, “So what? We weren’t discussing your private life; we were discussing public policy. Don’t bother us with matters that are not our concern.”This would be my own inclination in such a situation. Carter clearly thinks such a reaction inappropriate, but it is hard to figure out what he thinks would be an appropriate response by nonreligious interlocutors to the claim that abortion is required (or forbidden) by the will of God. He does not think it is good enough to say: OK, but since I don’t think there is such a thing as the will of God, and since I doubt that we’ll get anywhere arguing theism vs. atheism, let’s see if we have some shared premises on the basis of which to continue an argument about abortion. He thinks such a reply would be condescending and trivializing. But are we atheist interlocutors supposed to try to keep the conversation going by saying, “Gee! I’m impressed. You have a really deep, sincere faith”? Suppose we try that. What happens then? What can either party do for an encore?
What, indeed, happens then? Once we progressives grant that some people’s beliefs stem from their deep, sincere faith (as they surely do), what is supposed to follow from this?
It does not seem likely to me that the “respect for faith” position on the liberal-left is driven by a desire to bring people like Bill Donohue back into the fold so that they’ll stop ranting about that chocolate Jesus. Nor does it seem to be the case that millions of people are trying to make a religious case for raising the minimum wage, say, and are being thwarted by secular liberal-elitist wonks who insist on keeping the discussion in the sublunary realm of economics.
Now, I know that there are snarky liberal elites and sundry rootless cosmopolitans out there who mock certain forms of religiosity, sanctimoniousness, and (especially) hypocrisy, and I know that they sometimes miss their mark and come off as mocking every kind of faith. In fact, snarky liberal elitists and rootless cosmopolitans are some of my best friends! And I know very well that some atheists can get downright annoying in their insistence that they have have objectively demonstrated the nonexistence of God using simple algebra and a household magnifying glass. Fine. I grant these things. But I see no evidence whatsoever that “persons of faith” are discouraged in any way from testifying to their faith in American political life, which is why complaints about Democrats’ indifference or hostility to religion strike me as so very disingenuous. These complaints can’t possibly be about hostility to religion in American politics, I think. And when they come from the left side of the spectrum, they can’t possibly be about trying to win over voters on the religious right. Nor do they seem to be centrally concerned about issues of war and peace -- or even the minimum wage. Nor do I see religious progressives arguing for greater discrimination against gays and lesbians. So I’m left to wonder: is this conversation-stopping conversation all about abortion, in the end? Because when political liberals and moderates ask atheists like me to give even more weight to religious beliefs in the public square, I can hardly believe that they’re merely asking me to reply, “gee, I’m impressed -- you have a really deep, sincere faith.”


I was born, raised and educated as a Catholic, today I'm an atheist. I don't know how I got to this point, but I'm here. When the occasion arises, I tell my believer friends that I think its a good thing for those that believe in God and the after life as it obviously gives them some form of positive reinforcement. I would never ridicule anyone for believing in God, nor would I try to convert them to atheism.
April 5, 2007 2:07 PM | Reply | Permalink
Perfessor Bérubé,
Welcome to the cafe! You know we have no dancing badgers here...at least, not yet...
April 5, 2007 2:09 PM | Reply | Permalink
I believe the problem you are dealing with is form of denial. In American thought, the door is closed on the idea that morality arises independently of religion. Of course, the philosophers know better, but who pays attention to them?
In liberal discussion, there is much assertion of moral grounding of policies without any claim of religious rationale. Consequently, for the person committed to rejecting a-religious morality, these claims are implicitly hostile.
This is why the passionate religions all go Republican. They don't expect bankers to claim a moral ground for their greed. Their compromise is all within their metaphysic.
To compromise with the left would mean they would have to accept morality arising without God, which would undermine their religion itself.
April 5, 2007 2:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
Welcome to TPMCafe, Michael, from another central PA resident. I moved here about a year and a half ago from the SF Bay Area.
If you live around State College you may have noticed, as I have, a certain reticence to talk about religion *or* politics. Where I used to live, an overtly political statement, especially a left-leaning one, was a good way to start a conversation. Even a religious statement, as long as it was couched in non-denominational language such as concerning "spirituality", "being in the present", "allowing a connection with the divine", etc. that presented as not necessarily Christian, could start a conversation rather than stopping it.
But here it feels to me as if one needs to wrap any potentially controversial statement in bubble wrap first. For example, this recent exchange between me and a woman I don't know very well, but I suspect may be left-leaning:
She: "I just saw the movie 'Amazing Grace'"
I: "Really? I never heard of it. What's it about?"
She: "Well, that's difficult for me to say, without, you know ... politically ... well, let's just say that it has some things to say about the way things are in this country."
And then the conversation ended, I didn't know very much about the movie or about where she was coming from politically or religiously. She didn't know any more about me either.
...
Maybe it's because in the Bay Area we were all pretty certain where we were coming from, and we were all coming from the same place. Here, not so much? Or maybe central Pennsylvanians are just naturally reticent to discuss politics and religion?
So, I find myself having dissatisfyingly few person-to-person conversations about interesting topics. And I am beginning to think that it is incumbent on all of us, especially leftists and atheists, to say not "gee, I'm impressed with the depth of your faith (or of your fervent conservatism)", but, "You know, that is really great that you believe the way you do. But I don't. Let me tell you why."
On TPMCafe, I think that means maybe we *should* feed the trolls.
April 5, 2007 2:24 PM | Reply | Permalink
Hi Michael, you are as dangerous as ever.
I think that it is a good time for an atheist offensive. More precisely, two related claims can be advanced:
a. atheists do not have to have moral principle, but most of them do, and they need no "spiritual roots" for the morality.
b. all too many self-styled people of faith have amazingly situational attitude to morality: is torture OK? Is unprovoked war OK? (Apparently, after personal guidance from the Lord, indeed it is!)
Another idea is that atheists and progressive Christian could combine forces for the jihad against mockery of religion espoused by theologians of American Enterprise Institute. It is one thing to believe that an immortal soul enters each embrio right after conception so once a sperm and ovum are joined, no human agency can impede their/its development. It is quite another to combine it into a unified "pro-family" agenda with "biblically inspired tax policies" like flat tax or getting rid of taxes on inheritances and capital gains, and biblically inspired denial of global warming, and biblically justifed imperialism etc. These people torture logic, torture Scripture and, of course, torture people.
April 5, 2007 2:35 PM | Reply | Permalink
It is an indication of how far Americans are from collective action that "God's will" plays such a role in conversations - political life. Human action is the answer to both. Is anti-abortionism the bottom line on God's will? No, women hating is America's religious-political pastime, anti-abortionism just being one of its dimensions. "Family values" and anti-sex campaigns (abstinence) are the more common and far-reaching ones.
April 5, 2007 2:37 PM | Reply | Permalink
Living in suburban Philadelphia, which is a pretty open-minded place compared to central Pennsylvania, I can say that this is still a pretty hard topic to discuss publicly. Many students are pretty good on this topic until their parents jump in and shut off discussion.
The Bay Area is a great place to discuss anything as are other pockets in America, but, I believe only 10% of the US population is agnostic/atheist. Until Americans can discuss everything rationally I'm afraid we are doomed to come in a distant second in the world intellectually. Every place that is more open-minded than the USA is tied for first.
I also think this also pertains to the poor critical thinking skills that enabled Cheney/Bush/WHIG to snooker so many Americans for quite a time after 9/11.
Tom
April 5, 2007 2:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
... but what worries me is that this "positive reinforcement" frequently comes at the expense of rational critical thinking (which results in Cheney/Bush/Whig types getting away with conning so many for so long).
PS I was also raised Catholic, but became agnostic in soph year at St. Joe's in PA., thanks to reading Will Durant's Story of Philosophy and Story of Civilization.
Tom
April 5, 2007 2:45 PM | Reply | Permalink
You should try teaching ethics in New York City without running cross ways of this little bugaboo...
April 5, 2007 2:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
Excellent piece. Regarding atheists: some have become fairly annoying lately in terms of facile, smarmy and juvenile behavior. It's one thing to not have a personal religious belief. It's quite another to go up to perfect strangers (ie. via blogs etc.) and tell them that they are idiots, morons and fools for not being atheists (ie. only atheists know the 'truth' and all 'religionists' are idiots by definition).
April 5, 2007 2:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
I wouldn't vote for the GEICO caveman. The lizard, maybe.
April 5, 2007 2:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
It gets worse. I can't find the figures offhand, but a majority of professional scientists are atheists. A significant portion of the rest favor Buddhism or Taoism - essentially nontheistic religions - or some variation on a spiritualistic, panpsychic, or polytheistic leaning.
Now why is this? Most any child bright enough to follow her or his curiosity into the sciences, with the necessary emphasis on not believing anything short of experimental verification and good, logical hypotheses, is going to reject the common claims of the popular monotheisms well before high school. Granted, some few scientists return to some sort of monotheism after mystical experiences (often on psychedelics - still a rite of passage among science students), but their monotheism is usually panpsychism or the like cloaked in more conventional garb, rather than anything like Biblical literalism.
So to some large extent there really is a "monotheism or science" choice made by each child. And as long as the the proportion choosing monotheism is greater than the proportion that favors science, we risk extinction as a civilization. It's too bad the Constitution blocks instituting abstinence classes in our public high schools - abstinence from monotheism. It's a disease of the mind, a meme whose time is far past, although once upon a time it was of occasional virtuous use.
April 5, 2007 2:55 PM | Reply | Permalink
It is equally offensive in reverse, don'cha'know.
As I have posted elsewhere, even the TERM "atheist" is offensive to me by setting theism at the center.
I prefer to think of myself as comparative LESS SUPERSTITIOUS.
April 5, 2007 2:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think the GEICO caveman probably believed in the spirit of his ancestors.....
April 5, 2007 2:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
How about someone who "believes" in God but feels all organized Christian religions pervert the "word of God" (whatever that is), are corrupt and only will have a negative impact on society (past, present and future)? That would be me. And I would be viewed with the same hostility as an athiest would endure...any maybe even more hostility. The opposition is just as much, if not more so, is about being against the political agenda of organized Christianity as it is for actually being a "non-believer"
April 5, 2007 3:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
It's arguable that Jesus was the ultimate moral atheist. Since Jesus knew he was the physical son of God, he didn't have to believe in anything. God was his actual Dad. If it is fact, you don't have to believe in it.
And Good 4 America: saying to a religious person that you are "less superstitious" than they are is very juvenile, smarmy and insulting. It is exactly the type of self-defeating behavior I was describing in my post above.
April 5, 2007 3:07 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think that the reason Rorty's essay is more relevant now than ever is because the notion of "faith" has become so dangerous. I don't want to merely echo (or endorse) Sam Harris's book "The End Of Faith"--in many respects, I find it politically simplistic and borderline racist. But he does have one think right: A majority of religious people in this country prize action based on faith (or "wishful thinking") above action based on empirical evidence, and it's naive to think that this kind of thought pattern begins and ends with religious beliefs. Too many people (even high level politicians) let themselves be guided more by what they want to believe than by what the cold, hard evidence supports. From global warming, to the "benefits" of a free market economy, to our prospects in Iraq. And by giving people a "pass" on their religious beliefs, we're depriving ourselves of the ability to have any true rational discourse.
Of course, the good thing about the growing atheist movement--from Harris to Dennett and Dawkins, is that more rational people are starting to say, enough is enough.
On a personal note, I took several classes from Stephen Carter in law school, and I have to say, the man is as BRIGHT as a thousand watt light bulb. I've met some smart people in my life, but few as smart as he.
April 5, 2007 3:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
I agree. On the one hand, I can see why it's provoked by the great number of noisy fanatics who crowd the rightwing airwaves. On the other hand, it's descending to their level.
April 5, 2007 3:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think you are perfectly correct in pointing out the foolishness of liberals doing the whole "respect faith" dance. If it were sincere I think it wouldn't be so bad, but really it is as insincere as can be even from St. Obama. They think they need now to someone display their religious affiliations and beliefs to garner larger numbers of votes and shave off a few Christian Fundmentalists from the Republicans. It's ridiculous. It only gives more traction to those reactionary fundamentalists who in no way value the genius of what the founders established for us.
Those who understand and are comfortable with their religious beliefs understand also that while their religious beliefs inform their world view and outlook, it is simply foolish to allow religious dogma to enter into the thinking of policy makers and equally foolish to allow religious dogma to become a mainstream tenet of public debate. Why? Well for many reasons really but the most important of them in my opinion are that debate over questions of religious dogma or debating how to apply dogma to public policy is a private and not a public matter. Our elected officials are most decidedly NOT our religious leaders and neither the founders nor the majority of people today wish them to be. Dogmatic concerns should be strictly limited to privately conducted debates within a religious community. Jefferson and many others including me are happy to let you love and adhere to your dogma, but that's your personal business, it isn't public business, we don't want to hear about it because it leads to no good in public affairs. The other main reason is because we know, as the founders did, that once religious debates become political debates then dogma is used as a cudgel to beat people into submission particularly by larger goups of dogmatic adherents who inevitably begin to demand conformity from those who belong to smaller religious dogmatic groups or those who belong to no organized dogmatic religous group. Religion in and of itself is not a problem in a free and democratic society such as ours. However, like power, which will (not may, but will) be abused by those who wield it, religion will always be abused when it becomes part of the political debate. Religious dogmatists who enter upon the field of public debate, elections, and government demanding that their dogma be observed and venerated inevitably abuse the position and power they gain and bend it toward their own dogmatic ends. The religious stripe of the dogmatists matters not one whit. Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. And religious power mixed with politics corrupts and then kills religious freedom and freedom of conscience.
By removing religion from our political system the founders brilliantly bypassed the pointless and completely unproductive, idiotic, bloody foolishness of religious dogmatism. It is the genius of our system and should be defended by all genuine patriots, not to the detriment of religion or civil society but to the great benefit of both as we have seen in our national experience. Back in the Old World where this separation never was and the uncontrollable urge to abuse power in the name of religious dogma reigned for hundreds and hundreds of years there are far fewer believers in any God of any kind. So oddly, those who are the most fervent believers are those who ought to be most adamant about maintaining the distinct separation of religion from our politics.
April 5, 2007 3:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't share Rorty's views in philosophy, in particular, the views he laid down in "Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature" and later works.
I do share his view on the proper boundaries of religious beliefs. However, I have a hard time reconciling these views of his with his overall relativist bent. In particular, his rejection of the idea that propositions can faithfully reflect external reality. If the truth of a belief is to be determined by its usefulness (pragmatism) or it's coherence with the sum total of one's belief system (Duhem-Quine Thesis), then why exactly, according to his overal philosophical position, should not Faith play a public role?
Who is to say that a religious belief system does not work or is undesirable on a pragmatic/coherentist accounting of what works?
Who is to determine what works?
April 5, 2007 3:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
Would you mind explaining yourself? Theism is precisely the same sort of erroneous thinking as telling fortunes with the Tarot or belief in Astrology. It reflects exactly the same sort of need for and belief in magic. Consequently, it is superstition.
I do not consider myself FREE of superstition, but this is a superstition I have gotten past, like the fear of the dark I had as a child. So I am LESS SUPERSTITIOUS. I am quite serious about this.
To use the term "atheist" places YOUR world view before mine. THAT is OFFENSIVE. I place my world view first, and consider theism to be a superstition.
You can do whatever you want when talking in private, but when communicating with me, you must RESPECT ME. I am very tired of the tables being reversed.
April 5, 2007 3:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
Looks like a Zombie/Caveman ticket would lock up 106% of the vote.
Zombie/Caveman 2008!
April 5, 2007 3:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why not? This certainly seems to be the motivation of the DLC/TAP attacks on outspoke lefty atheism.
April 5, 2007 3:44 PM | Reply | Permalink
Could you cut & paste some examples of atheists telling people they are "idiots, morons and fools for not being atheists?" That is something I truly have never seen, and I hae read 2 of Sam Harris' books: He does call into question the critical thinking skills of people who believe in god, but that is not what you are saying.
Your examples make me think of the rhetoric of the Bush & Cheney regime, as they call people Alqaida types, put them down for "not supporting the troops", and call them unpatriotic for disagreeing with their style of war-mongering , er... governing.
They label themselves "christians," claim that god speaks in their ears, and a whole population of fundamentalists follow lock-step without questioning the actual morality of their actions.
Jan Knaus
April 5, 2007 3:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
Somewhat off-topic, these findings may bode well for Democrats, especially considering that a good number of the "would vote fors" probably came from Dems and a good number of "would not vote fors" probably came from Republicans:
Mormon 72 24
Married for the third time 67 30
72 years of age 57 42
It's going to be hard to win starting off down 24 to 42 points. Electing an African-American or a woman looks downright easy in comparison.
April 5, 2007 3:57 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why would an all-powerful and all-knowing god, who used to write on stone and separate seas to make his "points" let that happen?
If you believe that god inspired the bible, why is not one single thing -- heaven or hell, predictions of things to come -- not one single thing -- beyond the ability for a man to imagine?
If you don't believe that the bible is the word of god, what are your ideas about what god wants for the world, and where did they come from?
I'm not trying to be difficult, I really wonder about these things, and especially about people like you who are obviously intelligent.
Jan Knaus
April 5, 2007 4:02 PM | Reply | Permalink
It is all about abortion. A political scientist from my state, Utah, said the state which was blue as recently as the 70s went red over abortion. Nothing else matters. The most liberal person I know has said: "Give them abortion so we can get on with other, important things." I'm afraid it will be give 'em an inch problem but I do admit (especially since I am past child bearing years) that I would love to find a way to a truce and there appears no way to do it without talking abortion.
Not to put to fine a point on it you can get conscientious objector status without believing in God as per Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S. 333 (US Supreme Court 1970) which some have argued (including me) overturned Seeger. Seeger is this great 1964 case where the petitioners were basically arguing they were were secular humanists and the court said OK, you can be a CO BUT if you were an atheist...not so much. In Welsh the court held if your beliefs "play the role of religion" in your life, that's good enough for us as long as they are sincerely held. The case is a great read (remember when we had liberals on the court?) if you've got the time and while I still balk at the idea that my moral code must "play the role of religion" I can life with that.
On statistics: the largest survey done recently was done in 2001. The question was asked: "Do you live with anyone who is not religious?" 19% said yes. "Are you religious?" 14% said no. 5% of us are lying and there are more of us than you think.
I'm currently toying with calling myself a "non-religious Christian" because atheist is such a conversations stopper (and career stopper I might add.)
April 5, 2007 4:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
Oleeb: Obviously someone is a liberal (like me) and who is also religious (like me) has to mention their religious beliefs at some point and in some fashion if they choose to run for President. If only in the sense that they can't "lie" about it. If you subscribe to a certain religious faith, that is part of what you are.
I was brought up in the New England Methodist Church which is about as politically and socially liberal as atheism. For that reason, I don't see the big deal about religious faith and public life because the religion I was brought up in has all of this stuff built into it. For instance, New England Methodists teach that all religious faiths should be respected, including having no religious faith. The Sunday school song I learned when I was 7 years old sort of sums up my faith:
Jesus loves the little children
All the children of the world
Red and yellow, black and white
All are precious in his sight.
Jesus loves the little children of the world.
My theology doesn't go much past that stanza of that song because I've never seen a need to make it any more complicated than that.
April 5, 2007 4:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
I agree to the extent that the "believers" you refer to and the believers I refer to are different. I don't know any right wing christians (believers), the religious people I know aren't the Falwell, Robertson, Southern Baptist types.
April 5, 2007 4:10 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think that's about right, Good 4 A Merica, and before I shut down my old blog I decided to try to tell the story of my one and only "fruitful" encounter with an evangelist preacher: http://www.michaelberube.com/index.php/weblog/credo/
April 5, 2007 4:11 PM | Reply | Permalink
Similarity tends to increase efficiency, harmony, and communication but may also lead to predictability and stagnation.
Variety tends to increase innovation and accelerate evolution but but may also lead to disharmony and misunderstanding.
Evangelizing personal beliefs can encourage vigorous and productive debate, or produce hostility and further segregation.
Reinforcing group beliefs can produce group momentum or produce an echo chamber.
Weighing situations on that 2 axis framework, it's usually easily apparent what approach makes the most sense.
April 5, 2007 4:12 PM | Reply | Permalink
Just FYI: Since the 1970 Supreme Court decision, a moral or philosophical basis for conscientious objection to military service has been allowed to be used by C. O. applicants. Worked for this non-believer in 1970!
April 5, 2007 4:17 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks, piotr! But I believe the proper term is "dangeral."
One caveat about that atheist offensive, though: Sam Harris's sometimes-but-only-when-we-really-need-it defense of torture doesn't provide us with any moral clarity on that front. Rorty's straightforward opposition to cruelty leaves us much better off -- even if (as I see elsewhere in this thread) people don't particularly like his version of philosophical pragmatism.
April 5, 2007 4:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
The little guy doesn't sound like he was born in the US. But if we're going to rewrite that part of the constitution for Ahnuld (it never made much sense anyhow, except to people who hated Alexander Hamilton), then, sure, give the gecko a shot.
April 5, 2007 4:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
Yikes!
Now is NOT the time for new cultural "offensives."
Now is the time to focus on serious mainstream issues, and bring the country together around them, moving the country forward in a way we haven't seen in generations.
Take War and Peace, Rule of Law, Checks and Balances, Corruption, Health Care, Class Divides, Global Warming, and Energy Independence for starters.
btw, I'm an atheist, what you'd even call a hard atheist, though technically we're all agnostic, and it's difficult enough just to explain let alone launch an "offensive" on.
April 5, 2007 4:23 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think that ticket already stole the elections in 2000 & 2004.
Tom
April 5, 2007 4:24 PM | Reply | Permalink
Jan-
I think that the comments being referred to aren't made in Harris's book, but are the kind of comments you see reading public blogs and commentaries. Back when Yahoo news had discussion boards, I would read plenty of derrogatory comments about theists written by atheists. Heck, I even posted a couple. I think such forums were very emboldening (maybe too much so) for atheists, for whom the anonymity of the internet played a refreshing counterpart to the more common social need for atheists to remain in the closet.
April 5, 2007 4:25 PM | Reply | Permalink