Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Faced with Economic Crunch and Management Squeeze, Unions Fight Back
Mischa Gaus, Mark Brenner
Democracy and Elections:
Naomi Klein: The Shock Doctrine Got Shot Down in Canada
Kim Elliott
DrugReporter:
The Sensational World of Drug Paperbacks
Stephen J. Gertz
Election 2008:
Untangling Obama's Cabinet
Matt Stoller
Environment:
Confessions of an Evangelical Tree Hugger
Matthew Sleeth
ForeignPolicy:
Green Paper Gold: How to Pay for a Global 'New New Deal'
Jeremy Brecher, Tim Costello, Brendan Smith
Health and Wellness:
Readers Write: Lessons From an Emergency Room Nightmare
Heather Gehlert
Hurricane Katrina:
The Homicides You Didn't Hear About in Hurricane Katrina
Rebecca Solnit
Immigration:
Global Crisis Hits Overseas Workers Hard
Carmela Cruz
Media and Technology:
How NASA Became Massively Dysfunctional
Karl Grossman
Movie Mix:
Love Bites: What Sexy Vampires Tell Us About Our Culture
Sarah Seltzer
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
How D.C. Pharmacies are Failing Patients
Amanda Hess
Rights and Liberties:
Gaza Carnage Sets West Bank Aflame
Mel Frykberg
Sex and Relationships:
Sodomy Laws Are Rooted in British Colonialism
Nergui Manalsuren
War on Iraq:
The Moral Legitimacy of Refusing to Fight in an Illegitimate War
Camillo "Mac" Bica
Water:
How the West's Energy Boom Could Threaten Drinking Water for 1 in 12 Americans
Abrahm Lustgarten
Every margalized group needs allies, atheists included. And atheists make good allies -- we're a growing movement that's lively, outspoken, and passionately committed to social justice. So what do atheists want from their allies? And how can progressive non-atheist people and groups be good allies with the atheist movement?
(A quick disclaimer first: While I suspect that a lot of atheists will more or less agree with much of this list, I really am speaking only for myself here. Atheists are notoriously independent, and they don't like having other people speak for them.)
1: Familiarize yourself with the common myths and misconceptions about atheists -- and don't perpetuate them.
There's a lot of misunderstanding and ignorance about who atheists are and what we do and don't believe. Needless to say, these myths and misconceptions are wrong. Don't believe them. Don't perpetuate them. Don't let them infect the way you speak and act, and please speak out against them when you hear them. Find out what we actually think and believe and do, instead of what anti- atheist propaganda says about what we think and believe and do.
Sam Harris has written a pretty good list of the most common myths about atheists, with short arguments against them. There's a touch of needless snark in the piece, IMO -- Harris can't quite resist the temptation to get in a few digs against religion when he should probably just be explaining atheism -- but overall, it gives a good, concise view of the most common misconceptions about atheism, and why, exactly, they're mistaken.
I'm just going to add one quick thing to Harris's list before I move on: The myth that atheists are 100% certain that there is no God, with a dogmatic attachment to that belief.
In reality, I've encountered almost no atheists who thought that God's existence had been definitely disproved. Atheism doesn't mean being 100% certain that God doesn't exist. It just means being certain enough. We're about as certain that Jehovah doesn't exist (or Yahweh, or Allah, or Ganesh, or the Goddess, or any of the gods that are commonly worshipped today) as we are that Zeus doesn't exist. If you don't think you're close-minded for not believing in Zeus, then please don't accuse atheists of being close-minded for not believing in your god.
2: Familiarize yourself with what it's like to be an atheist, both in the U.S. and in the rest of the world.
Discrimination against atheists, in the United States, and around the world, is very real. It doesn't look exactly like other forms of discrimination -- no form of discrimination looks exactly like any other -- but it is real.
Here are just a few examples.
According to a recent Gallup Poll, asking Americans who they'd be willing to vote for for President, atheists came in at the very bottom of the list: below blacks, below women, below Jews, below gays. Below every other marginalized group on the list. With less than half of Americans saying they'd vote for an atheist. Unless you live in a incredibly progressive district, being an out atheist will effectively kill any chances you have at a political career.
Atheists in the military have been illegally proselytized at, berated, called a disgrace, denied promotion, had meetings broken up, and been threatened with charges... all by superior officers, and all because of their atheism.
In her recent Senate campaign, Elizabeth Dole issued a series of campaign flyers and videos, centering on the fact that her opponent, Kay Hagan, had attended a fundraiser hosted by two atheist lobbyists... a campaign that openly referred to atheists as "vile," that treated the very existence of atheists as an abomination, and that used language about atheists that would have raised a tidal wave of shock and denunciation around the country if it had been aimed at any other religious group.
See more stories tagged with: religion, atheism
Read more of Greta Christina at her blog.
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