Vlad: we live in a predominantly non-religious society and culture, but not a secular state.
Surely not even you could suggest that were the trifling privileges mentioned be removed
everybody will be on a living wage etc, etc, etc.
No, the things are entirely separate, distinct and discrete.
Would removal of HoL bishops, disestablishment of the C of E - full secularism in other words - guarantee a living wage for those at the bottom of the pile and an end to the persecution of the physically and/or mentally ill (principally by that alleged Catholic, Iain Duncan Smith, so passionately and articulately, even I would say fiercely challenged and criticised by other Catholics)?
No.
Would it make,
over all, for a fairer, more just and egalitarian society? I say yes. An end to entirely unwarranted, unjustified and indefensible privileges is not what I regard as trifling. As I think Nearly Sane (not sure; dredging the memory here) said only the other day with regard to America's explicitly secularist Constitution, you have to stand up for the smaller examples in order to defend the greater overarching principles.