I'm impressed, sir, with your literate grasp on the political situation. I'm equally impressed with the lack of it on the part of the initiator of this thread.theopoesis wrote:
(1) Rights are always competing.
(2) While many Christians (particularly in the United States) have neglected poverty as a voting issue, it is historically false to claim that dogma makes Christians ignore poverty.
In short, the article has a simplistic view of religious groups' engagement with politics.
I almost don't need to point this out, it's so absurd. In point of fact, many of the reasons that the large civic problems facing our country are not resolved is the problem of public goods and voter accountability.Atheist leadership would be focused entirely on the actual civic problems facing the country.
Furthermore, even if all of the candidates and officials were atheists, Christians, Muslims, Jews, Jains, Buddhists, and every other religious group would still be voting, so basic political theory suggests that political candidates would still converge to their views.
Again, the author has a unfairly jaded view of religion and an unfairly rosey view of atheism.(Atheism) may be the only world view that places real world problems first and America needs that.
Finally, this association of "religious leadership" with "theocracy" is absurd.Of greater importance, however, is the danger of religious leadership. Theocratic nations restrict freedom and place adherence to religious dogma ahead of real-world issues and common sense.
Most of your words are an objection to bias. I've known many atheists who were well founded in their facts as well as their clarity of expression. Their contributions to society in politics and the arts have been extraordinary. WE NEED more people like them. Unfortunately, that is not the case with most participants on these pages.
Our nation has serious complex problems with equally complex roots. To suppose that simplistic statements, base upon religious (or political) bigotry, will resolve them is childish to say the least.
I salute your efforts to clarify the discussion.
and that's me, hollering from the choir loft...