Article about non-believers in Tucson paper



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "J Forbes"
Date: 13 Nov 2005 10:06:02 PM
Object: Article about non-believers in Tucson paper
interesting article...something we don't see too often
http://www.azstarnet.com/metro/102253.php
Jim
.

User: "stoney"

Title: Re: Article about non-believers in Tucson paper 14 Nov 2005 05:22:26 PM
On 13 Nov 2005 14:06:02 -0800, "J Forbes" <jforbspam@fastmail.fm>
wrote:

interesting article...something we don't see too often

http://www.azstarnet.com/metro/102253.php

Tucson Region
Nonbelievers find a voice
Organized faith leading them to band together
By Stephanie Innes
ARIZONA DAILY STAR
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 11.13.2005
Weary of feeling silenced by a culture dominated by organized faith,
nonbelievers in Southern Arizona - and across the country - are coming
out.
Atheists, agnostics and others who fall outside mainstream religion
are forming their own organizations - a move counterintuitive to some
in a group of individuals accustomed to the periphery. But
nonbelievers both locally and nationally say it's time join together,
step up and get some respect.
"I hear people wonder how atheists can be moral. I just think things
are getting really ridiculous," said 26-year-old Mary Adde, a
University of Arizona graduate student and atheist who is part of a
new campus club for nonbelievers.
In addition to the UA club, a local chapter of the international
Center for Inquiry - a support and education group for nonreligious
people - formed earlier this year, and members already are sponsoring
local movies and debates and writing letters to Congress. Tucson
Atheists became an official chapter of the national American Atheists
Inc. in March, and also plans more local visibility.
"It is a way for nonbelievers to come together and not feel so
isolated. I'm an atheist, and I'm proud of it," Tucson Atheists
spokeswoman Dr. Jasmine England said. "A lot of people think atheism
is negative and anti-religion. The reality is that church and state
should be separate, and in a free society everyone should be free to
choose what they believe and don't believe. Even some religious people
are against intermixing church and state."
Outside Southern Arizona, Hartford Seminary in Connecticut on Nov. 2
officially opened its Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society
and Culture with a mission of increasing understanding of the
contemporary significance of secular values.
And Lori Lipman Brown, a lawyer, atheist and former Nevada state
senator, began working in September as executive director for the
Secular Coalition for America in Washington, D.C., a lobbying group
with goals of keeping religion out of government and winning respect
for nonreligious Americans.
"We want to change the national conversation - to make it unacceptable
to make us invisible," Lipman Brown wrote in an e-mail. "Statements
claiming that we are all God-fearing Americans, or that there are no
atheists in foxholes, are both inaccurate and point out how often we
are left out. We want to stop the denigration of atheists in the
United States, and to dispel the myth that we are less moral than
theists."
Some of the issues Lipman Brown already has weighed in on include
opposing the federal government's reimbursement of churches that
helped survivors of Hurricane Katrina and endorsing the removal of
"under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance, saying it is a harsh
intrusion into the parental and student rights of nonbelievers.
"Groups that are sort of secular or atheist have been emboldened by
the religious right and want to counter a lot of what they consider to
be the effectiveness of the religious right," said Derek Davis,
director of the J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies at
Baylor University in Waco, Texas.
"We are living in a day when it's becoming increasingly acceptable to
let your anti-religious sentiments be known. You can compare it to the
homosexuals who come out, like the basketball player Sheryl Swoopes
just did. People are now more willing to come out and say, 'Yes, I'm
an atheist.' "
Tucsonan Jerry Karches, a retired physicist, is encouraging local
nonbelievers to speak up. Karches fears America is becoming a
theocracy.
"President Bush goes to Jesus Christ for advice. Do you know any other
leaders doing that in the world?" asked Karches, an atheist who helped
found the Center for Inquiry Community of Southern Arizona. "Most of
us are very concerned about the direction this country is going in.
We're out of step with most other Western nations."
The Geniuses of Diversity is a UA club led by 19-year-old Christopher
Bischof, a sophomore, history major and atheist who is organizing a
living-will event on campus. He says he wants to give students an
alternative to the myriad religious groups on campus. Bischof and
fellow student Nick Borst, also 19, came up with the idea of a club
for nonbelievers during the nationwide Terry Schiavo controversy about
end-of-life issues earlier this year.
"Chris and I felt like there wasn't enough representation on campus
for people who didn't buy into the whole organized religion thing,"
Borst said. "I see us bringing broader debate to campus."
When the group held its first meeting last month, the topic that
sparked the most passionate discussion was how nonbelievers can get
along with parents and other relatives who are religious. Some had
tips; others shared painful stories of alienation from religious
relatives.
"We want to let students know it's OK if you don't follow organized
religion, as long as you have some sort of values and try to be a good
person in life," Borst said.
The number of nonbelievers organizing in Southern Arizona so far is
small - the three local groups have about 160 total members. And
studies and polls that attempt to pinpoint the number of nonbelievers
in the United States vary widely.
The American Religious Identification Study in 2001 said 1 percent of
Americans - about 3 million people - identify as atheist or agnostic,
though Gallup surveys in 1996 showed 4 percent to 6 percent of
Americans - about 12 to 18 million - say they don't believe in a
higher power.
But critics, including some atheists and agnostics, doubt nonbelievers
will have much clout, even with a louder voice.
Most Americans do not share the groups' views, said Colby May,
director of the Washington office of the American Center for Law &
Justice, founded in 1990 by Christian televangelist Pat Robertson as a
nonprofit public-interest law firm.
"The vast majority of Americans have a faith. If this Secular
Coalition for America, if their whole thing is to make sure they
identify an incident where God is mentioned in a city seal or on some
government building and to go around and make sure we tear it out -
that is anathema to the way the majority of Americans feel," May said.
Not all nonbelievers are on the same page when it comes to politics,
and not all of them even want to be political. Borst, of the Geniuses
of Diversity, is politically conservative and thinks the current
administration is doing a good job ensuring freedom for both religious
and nonreligious Americans.
But most nonbelievers agree that atheists and other nonbelievers
should be raising and improving their public image.
"It's unpatriotic for an atheist to stay in the closet right now,"
American Atheists spokesman Dave Silverman said. "The most important
thing right now is to stand up and be counted."
Contact reporter Stephanie Innes at 573-4134 or

--
Contempt of Congress meter reading-offscale.
Hello, theocracy with a fundamentalist US Supreme
Court who will ensure church and state are joined
at the hip like clergy and altar boys.
America 1776-Jan 2001 RIP
"As democracy is perfected, the office of president
represents, more and more closely, the inner soul
of the people. On some great and glorious day the
plain folks of the land will reach their heart's
desire at last and the White House will be adorned
by a downright moron." --- H.L. Mencken (1880 - 1956)
Religion is the original war crime.
-Michelle Malkin (Feb 26, 2005)
.


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