But not as many I would imagine as secular humanists who want religion and the religious out of politics.
Vlad you really do have trouble with understanding secularism, secular humanists don't want to see religion and the religious out of politics, just take a moment read the words I'm writing not the words you might be thinking I'm writing.
The way our parliament works being a believer in one religion or another doesn't ban anyone from office and you'll have a job finding any secular humanist that would want to see any such ban come into force but that is where religion should start and finish in polotics.
The secularists that I know of are trying to stop the various religions having any more influence than the above, which involves making various attempts to do away with the many privileges they have managed to acquire over the centuries, I E the most obvious one Bishops in the House of Lords, chancellery privileges, any kind of special place in our schools, taxpayers paying for chaplains in the forces, prisons and hospitals, the religious being in the forefront at the remembrance day ceremonies at the cenotaph where the humanists, non-religious are banned, on the BBC where the religious can express themselves freely more or less any time they like and the non-religious are unable to have the same freedom of choice, another one bussing children to a faith school free of charge and there's no equivalent bussing for non-religious parents to bus their children away from religious schools, admittedly this practice is being phased out but there are still a few continuing with this outrageous privilege.
The above is just a few of the privileges secularists are not looking for or expect to have and don't expect any one else to have either, it's called a level playing field Vlad, see if you can get it this time.
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