The Atlantic
 
 
The Origins of Aggressive Atheism
Non-believers are often  marginalized in the U.S., which has led to a lot 
of resentment among their  ranks. But don't be deceived: For most Americans, 
lack of religion usually comes  with a shrug, not a shout.

 
_Emma Green_ (http://www.theatlantic.com/emma-green/)   Nov 24  2014, 8:51 
AM ET
 
O sinner! Consider the fearful danger you are in: It is a great  furnace of 
wrath, a wide and bottomless pit, full of the fire of wrath, that you  are 
held over in the hand of that God. 
American faith has gone through many awakenings. Depending on _how  you 
count_ 
(http://www.jstor.org/discover/10.2307/3711158?uid=3739704&uid=2&uid=4&uid=3739256&sid=21104632779561)
 , there have been three or four distinctive 
surges of Protestant  religiosity in the United States, marked by tent 
revivals, missionary work,  widespread conversions, and, often, intense 
rhetoric 
about the consequences of  sin. These "Great Awakenings" have been 
memorialized through texts like "Sinners  in the Hands of an Angry God," a 
sermon 
delivered by the preacher Jonathan  Edwards in 1741, who warned of the "fire of 
wrath" in hell. 
So it's provocative to title your book Atheist Awakening. Oxford  
University Press's _newest  release on non-belief_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Atheist-Awakening-Secular-Activism-Community/dp/0199986320)
 , by researchers Richard 
Cimino and Christopher Smith,  _claims  to be_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias=aps&field-keywords=sociology+of+american+atheism&rh
=i:aps,k:sociology+of+american+atheism)  the "first sociological 
exploration of organized secularism in  America," tracing the evolution of the 
atheist 
community over the past several  decades. The "awakening" part is "not so 
much a growth in numbers as an  awakening to claiming atheism for themselves, 
and becoming more public about  it," said Cimino. 
By numbers alone, American atheists really aren't that big of a group.  
According to a 2012 Pew report, atheists make up only about 2.4 percent of the  
population. Even agnostics, whom you could maybe call atheistic-ish, only  
account for an estimated  3.3 percent of Americans. Although both groups  
have grown somewhat since 2007, the bigger change has been among those who  
identify as "nothing in particular"—roughly 13.9 percent of the population,  
which is an increase of 2.3 percentage points over five years. 
When you _read_ (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/religious-nones/)  
_headlines_ 
(http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/01/14/169164840/losing-our-religion-the-growth-of-the-nones)
   _about_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/01/spiritual-but-not-religious-a-rising-misunderstood-voti
ng-bloc/283000/)   the rise of the so-called "nones," or people who don't 
consider themselves part  of a religion, that's what they're mostly referring 
to: the shruggers. They  might be intensely spiritual or perfectly 
apathetic about faith, but for some  reason or another, they don't 
self-identify as 
definitively atheistic.
 
Among those who do identify as atheists, though, the tone taken toward  
organized religion, especially recently, has been more shout-y than shrug-y. At 
 the 2012 Reason Rally in Washington, D.C., for example, "a band fired up 
the  crowd with a rousing song that lampooned the belief in 'Jesus coming 
again,'  mixing it with sexual innuendo," Cimino and Smith write. Attendees 
sported  T-Shirts and signs with slogans like "I prefer facts" and "religion is 
like a  penis" (involving _a  rather extended metaphor_ 
(http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2012/03/10_best_signs_at_the_reason_
rally_in_dc.php?page=7) ). There was a life-sized Jesus puppet. 
This wasn't just some small enclave meeting for some drinks and  
Judeo-Christian trash talk; there were between _8,000_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/24/atheist-rally_n_1377443.html#s811235title=Reason_Rally_on)
   and 
_20,000_ 
(http://content.usatoday.com/communities/Religion/post/2012/03/-atheists-richard-dawkins-reason-rally/1#.VHKs7FfF_xg)
   people there (a 
puzzlingly wide range of estimates, but still: in the  thousands). Richard 
Dawkins, 
one of the keynote speakers, encouraged attendees  to "ridicule" people's 
faith. Not all atheists take this tone toward faith, but  it's a somewhat 
common posture, especially among some of atheism's most vocal  advocates, 
including Dawkins and people like PZ Myers and Bill Maher. 
"It's definitely one of their strategies," said Cimino. "There is this 
strong  attempt to be kind of irreverent." This is a quality particular to "new 
 
atheism," he said, a term for Dawkins-style arguments against faith, which 
rely  heavily on science and invocations of rationalism. "There's a sense 
that once  you make fun of it, you can kind of demystify religion," he added. 
But there's also a sense, at least in reading Atheist Awakening,  that 
derision toward faith among outspoken atheists is partially a product of  
accumulated bitterness. "It is hard not to come to the conclusion that atheists 
 
have spent a far greater deal of time thinking and writing about religion 
than  religious people ever have of atheists as a group," the authors write. 
_American  voters disapprove of atheist politicians_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/05/when-it-comes-to-presidents-americans-are-existen
tial-philosophers/371361/) ; _parents  dread the possibility of atheist 
boyfriends and girlfriends for their kids_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2014/06/shun-the-atheist-boyfriend/372709/)
 ;  and in general, _the 
 public feels less warmly toward non-believers than almost any other faith. 
_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/07/16/how-americans-feel-about-religious-groups/) 
Being an atheist means defining oneself in opposition to theism, but 
that  doesn't necessarily go both ways. America is a land of ambient 
distrust of  people who don't believe in God, but mostly in the way of a high 
school full of  queen-bee cool kids and nearly invisible geeks. 

This milieu shaped the rise of what you might call aggressive atheism, the  
kind that mocks and dismisses religious belief. As Cimino and Smith point 
out,  this outspokenness has helped atheism gain visibility and coherency as 
a  movement. But it also has downsides. 
"In accepting a label, particularly the label of 'atheist,' it seems to me  
that we are consenting to be viewed as a cranky sub-culture," said the 
writer  Sam Harris _at an  Atheist Alliance conference in 2007_ 
(http://www.samharris.org/site/full_text/the-problem-with-atheism) . "We are 
consenting to 
be viewed as a  marginal interest group that meets in hotel ballrooms. ... As 
a matter of  strategy, we have walked into a trap."   
For the next generation of atheists, though, things might be different—
fewer  dinners of bad baked chicken at conferences, more Internet. 
"Especially with young people … there’s an openness with respect to 
choosing  your religion, as opposed to just staying with the religion you’re 
born 
into,"  said Smith. The Internet facilitates this: People who might 
otherwise feel  isolated by the religious mores in their hometowns have access 
to 
communities of  people who believe otherwise. "Atheists [aren't] loners 
without any sort of  social networks," he said. "You can have social community, 
and social  gatherings, without being in the same geographic meeting place."
 
 
This includes websites like _Freethought Blogs_ 
(http://freethoughtblogs.com/)  and Reddit,  which hosts a forum where people 
can post ideas and links 
about atheism.  "According to its many testimonial posts, the forum known as 
r/atheism is a  lifeboat in a sea of religious intolerance and 
incredulity," Cimino and Smith  write. Topics include family and friends who 
aren't open 
to atheism, debates  about social issues like abortion, and basic stuff 
like "atheist symbols other  than the Darwin fish." 
There are also downsides to these kinds of anonymous online communities. In 
a  2011 incident referred to as "_redditgate_ 
(http://skepchick.org/2011/12/reddit-makes-me-hate-atheists/) ,"  a 15-year-old 
girl posted an image of 
herself holding a book on atheism she got  for Christmas; a number of 
commenters replied with sexually explicit remarks. _Other  instances of sexual 
harassment in the atheist community_ 
(http://www.buzzfeed.com/markoppenheimer/will-misogyny-bring-down-the-atheist-movement)
  have raised  questions about 
how friendly it is for women. 
And in general, American atheists are much more likely to be male than  
female; in 2012, _Pew  estimated _ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/files/2012/10/NonesOnTheRise-full.pdf) that about 64 
percent of self-declared atheists are men. 
They're  also whiter, wealthier, and more educated than the general public. 
But they're also much, much younger. An estimated 42 percent of atheists 
are  between 18 and 29 years old; in general, that age group only makes up 22 
percent  of the American population. Most other adult atheists are under 50; 
there just  aren't that many self-professed non-believers among the Baby 
Boomers and  beyond. 
As thinkers like Sam Harris grow a following for less aggressive, combative 
 strains of atheism, and as online communities of young non-believers grow, 
 perhaps there will be less of a need for the shout-y, derisive brand of 
atheist  activism. Whether or not that constitutes an awakening is open for 
debate; in  the future, it might be closer to a "chilling out," a culture in 
which it's  easier to be casually open about not believing in God. 
Or maybe not. "For the near future, dialogue and empathy may have limited  
traction in a young social movement," the authors ultimately conclude. For  
members of a movement that's struggled to gain legitimacy and visibility in 
a  deeply religious country, shouting may still seem more  effective.

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