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In reply to the discussion: Belief in Five Spiritual Entities Edges Down to New Lows [View all]Celerity
(52,641 posts)22. Atheism is still a taboo for American politicians
Members of Congress are far more religious than their constituents
https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2023/01/06/atheism-is-still-a-taboo-for-american-politicians
https://archive.li/f78Qj
In 1952 president-elect Dwight Eisenhower set out what he saw as a cornerstone of American democracy: Our form of government has no sense unless it is founded in a deeply felt religious faithand I dont care what it is. His words still loom over American politics. Almost 88% of members of the 118th Congress, which convened on January 3rdbut whose House members have not yet elected a speakerare Christian. That share has barely shifted since the late 1970s (see chart). Only two membersless than half of 1%say they are not religious.

But the American public has changed. Just 64% of Americans say they are Christian compared with 90% in 1972. About 29% are religiously unaffiliated, up from 5%. Why are American lawmakers more pious than the population? Start with age. The average member of the House of Representatives is 57; the average senator is almost 64. The median age in America is 39. Older generations tend to be more religious than the young. In America, 83% of those over 65 are religious compared with 61% of those aged between 18 and 29.
Second, religious people may be particularly likely to run for office. Religious groups offer useful networks for politicians hoping to connect with voters. White evangelicals, a formidable force in the Republican base, are the most striking example. Democrats have traditionally benefitted from the votes of black Protestants, Jews and other religious minorities. Third, many American voters remain wary of atheists, despite their own waning religiosity. In May a poll by the University of Maryland asked respondents how likely they would be to vote for a presidential hopeful who otherwise shared their views, depending on the candidates faith. Only 48% said they would vote for an atheist, a lower number than for any religion.
Part of that suspicion dates to the cold war, when America faced an explicitly atheist enemy in the Soviet Union. It was then that America changed its motto to In God we trust, added a reference to the divine on dollar bills and inserted the Almighty into the pledge of allegiance. To this day its almost a death sentence [for a politician to be atheist], says Phil Zuckerman, of Pitzer College in California.
snip
Study of the Day: Religious People Distrust Atheists as Much as Rapists (2011)
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2011/12/study-of-the-day-religious-people-distrust-atheists-as-much-as-rapists/250005/
https://archive.li/4B3U2
SOURCE: The full study, "Do You Believe in Atheists? Distrust Is Central to Anti-Atheist Prejudice" (PDF)
https://www2.psych.ubc.ca/~ara/Manuscripts/Gervais%20et%20al-%20Atheist%20Distrust.pdf
https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2023/01/06/atheism-is-still-a-taboo-for-american-politicians
https://archive.li/f78Qj
In 1952 president-elect Dwight Eisenhower set out what he saw as a cornerstone of American democracy: Our form of government has no sense unless it is founded in a deeply felt religious faithand I dont care what it is. His words still loom over American politics. Almost 88% of members of the 118th Congress, which convened on January 3rdbut whose House members have not yet elected a speakerare Christian. That share has barely shifted since the late 1970s (see chart). Only two membersless than half of 1%say they are not religious.

But the American public has changed. Just 64% of Americans say they are Christian compared with 90% in 1972. About 29% are religiously unaffiliated, up from 5%. Why are American lawmakers more pious than the population? Start with age. The average member of the House of Representatives is 57; the average senator is almost 64. The median age in America is 39. Older generations tend to be more religious than the young. In America, 83% of those over 65 are religious compared with 61% of those aged between 18 and 29.
Second, religious people may be particularly likely to run for office. Religious groups offer useful networks for politicians hoping to connect with voters. White evangelicals, a formidable force in the Republican base, are the most striking example. Democrats have traditionally benefitted from the votes of black Protestants, Jews and other religious minorities. Third, many American voters remain wary of atheists, despite their own waning religiosity. In May a poll by the University of Maryland asked respondents how likely they would be to vote for a presidential hopeful who otherwise shared their views, depending on the candidates faith. Only 48% said they would vote for an atheist, a lower number than for any religion.
Part of that suspicion dates to the cold war, when America faced an explicitly atheist enemy in the Soviet Union. It was then that America changed its motto to In God we trust, added a reference to the divine on dollar bills and inserted the Almighty into the pledge of allegiance. To this day its almost a death sentence [for a politician to be atheist], says Phil Zuckerman, of Pitzer College in California.
snip
Is it any wonder when their own christian bible says things like this...............


Study of the Day: Religious People Distrust Atheists as Much as Rapists (2011)
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2011/12/study-of-the-day-religious-people-distrust-atheists-as-much-as-rapists/250005/
https://archive.li/4B3U2
SOURCE: The full study, "Do You Believe in Atheists? Distrust Is Central to Anti-Atheist Prejudice" (PDF)
https://www2.psych.ubc.ca/~ara/Manuscripts/Gervais%20et%20al-%20Atheist%20Distrust.pdf
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I'd wager they rate more poorly ... though objectively I'm not exactly sure why (nt)
Hugh_Lebowski
Jul 2023
#2
Why should it offend them? Is their belief so weak that critique or criticism of any or all
Celerity
Jul 2023
#14
Played by Mathew McConaughey. What a cool movie written my Carl Segan. nt
Prairie_Seagull
Jul 2023
#27
Far too many say they believe "just in case there's one hiding out there somewhere"....
KY_EnviroGuy
Jul 2023
#21