Just checking in again to see whether Vladdo has worked out yet his category error problem of comparing theism (a set of beliefs and practices) with secularism (the separation of those beliefs and practices from access by right to the offices of state).
Because in a secular society religious parties are always going to be minority parties and minority parties in our system have no hope of power. As Alistair Campbell put it mainly concerning the labour party .''We don't do religion''
The NSS is dually working to reinforce this system and excising the last vestige of religion.
Ah, and that’s a “no” then. It’s getting weirder now though – if, say, enough RCs (or leprechaunists for that matter) stood in an election and won the majority of seats there’s nothing about secularism that would stop them from forming the majority party in the House of Commons. And if they stayed there long enough there’s nothing to stop them from eventually nominating so many co-religionists for the HoL that they would form the majority there too.
The NSS is of course doing no such thing – to the contrary it expressly
protects the rights of those with any religion as well as those with none. What the NSS does do though is to campaign against special privileges being given to any of them
by right in the offices and instruments of state.
And who could argue with that?