Page 1 of 1

Join the atheists, everybody likes and trusts us!

Posted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 12:04 pm
by Dardedar
Atheists identified as America’s most distrusted minority, according to new U of M study

MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (3/20/2006) -- American’s increasing acceptance of religious diversity doesn’t extend to those who don’t believe in a god, according to a national survey by researchers in the University of Minnesota’s department of sociology.

From a telephone sampling of more than 2,000 households, university researchers found that Americans rate atheists below Muslims, recent immigrants, gays and lesbians and other minority groups in “sharing their vision of American society.” Atheists are also the minority group most Americans are least willing to allow their children to marry.

Even though atheists are few in number, not formally organized and relatively hard to publicly identify, they are seen as a threat to the American way of life by a large portion of the American public. “Atheists, who account for about 3 percent of the U.S. population, offer a glaring exception to the rule of increasing social tolerance over the last 30 years,” says Penny Edgell, associate sociology professor and the study’s lead researcher.

Edgell also argues that today’s atheists play the role that Catholics, Jews and communists have played in the past—they offer a symbolic moral boundary to membership in American society. “It seems most Americans believe that diversity is fine, as long as every one shares a common ‘core’ of values that make them trustworthy—and in America, that ‘core’ has historically been religious,” says Edgell. Many of the study’s respondents associated atheism with an array of moral indiscretions ranging from criminal behavior to rampant materialism and cultural elitism.

Edgell believes a fear of moral decline and resulting social disorder is behind the findings. “Americans believe they share more than rules and procedures with their fellow citizens—they share an understanding of right and wrong,” she said. “Our findings seem to rest on a view of atheists as self-interested individuals who are not concerned with the common good.”

The researchers also found acceptance or rejection of atheists is related not only to personal religiosity, but also to one’s exposure to diversity, education and political orientation—with more educated, East and West Coast Americans more accepting of atheists than their Midwestern counterparts.

The study is co-authored by assistant professor Joseph Gerteis and associate professor Doug Hartmann. It’s the first in a series of national studies conducted the American Mosaic Project, a three-year project funded by the Minneapolis-based David Edelstein Family Foundation that looks at race, religion and cultural diversity in the contemporary United States. The study will appear in the April issue of the American Sociological Review.

THE LINK
.
.
Image
.
.
Image
.

Posted: Sat Mar 25, 2006 12:31 pm
by Savonarola
Did anyone else see "St. Steve" on campus three or four years ago? He did a weeklong "piss off everyone who isn't as fundamental as I am" thing outside the student union. I stopped and gave him hell, in every sense of the phrase, and his only retort was that, as an atheist, I have no morals. His wife -- pregnant as could be, in true fundy fashion -- showed up one evening to pick him up, and he begged her to (1) give him the car keys and (2) stand away from me and next to him, because he thought I'd hurt the fetus and steal the keys.
Really now, if I were going to hurt someone, I would've knocked St. Steve's block off for being so incredibly dumb. Unfortunately, nobody would have noticed, as a St. Steve without a head would've had about as much brainpower as one with...

Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2006 11:49 am
by Barbara Fitzpatrick
They seem to have a very elastic definition of atheist. A few centuries back they invented Satanism as an excuse to kill anyone whose god was horned and seem to have retained the attitude, if not (all) the terminology.