Website review: A non-believer - say it isnt so - W...

MaiKeth MaiKeth discovered this in Atheist/Agnostic 7 reviews since Aug 11, 2007
icon tagsatheist, religion smh.com.au/news/world/a-nonbeliever--say-it-i...

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bluezfire rated 11 months ago
From the page: It seems that Americans want a Christian president, but they are not sure that he or she should let their religious supporters have open access to the Oval Office.
flyingrose rated 11 months ago
Those who believe in a "greater power" - regardless of the particular name they use for that power - and those who believe in "intelligent design" - have far more in common than some may realize. From the page: "Pete Stark found himself in a unique and slightly uncomfortable position earlier this year. The longtime Democrat congressman for the Oakland district near San Francisco had responded to a survey from the Secular Coalition for America which offered a $1000 prize to the person who could identify the "highest-level atheist, agnostic, humanist or any other kind of 'nontheist' currently holding elected public office in the United States". To his surprise, that was him. Stark was the only one of 535 federal politicians prepared to admit he had no religion. For a few brief weeks he was the poster-boy for the humanists in a nation where, according to Pew Foundation research, eight out of 10 people say they have "no doubt God exists" and that "prayer is an important part of their daily lives"."
fordsimmons rated 11 months ago
there goes my chances!
Kibiyama rated 11 months ago
From the page: "It would take a very charismatic atheist to convince people to vote for them."

Hah! But the anti-christ is supposed to be a charismatic deceiver, how would it be any better if he was charismatic?

He'd probably get shot! Well, he'd get shot anyways, but faster if he was charismatic...
shiftplus rated 11 months ago
Yet more proof that governmental politics is a load of bollocks.
Mershaullk rated 11 months ago
Prejudice, anyone?
kat rated 11 months ago
From the page: "To Australians, the idea of asking a politician about their religious beliefs and practices would seem impertinent, at best irrelevant."

Which is as it should be. As many, many xian 'leaders' have shown, religious types aren't necessarily good people.
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