Chilling and threatening by turns with IT'S THREAT TO FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION.
Hysterical non-sense. An atheocracy might, an overtly anti-theist society might, but that's not what I'm talking about - indeed I specifically rejected those as likely outcomes. No I am talking about a secular society - one in which there are no special privileges, nor discrimination (which is just the former turned on its head) on the basis of whether an individual is religious or not.
And of course it cuts both ways - if you don't wish to be negatively impacted by anti-theism (a reasonable desire) then atheists should not be negatively impacted by religions.
And freedom of expression has always been tempered - we might be able to believe what we like but society has always put limits on expressing those beliefs in actions - specifically where those actions impact negatively on others.
ALSO the suggestion that secularism can only be comfortable when atheists don't feel bothered by the religious gives lie to the claim that secularism is somehow a neutral position or enterprise in which religious people can play a full part.
Secularsim is an entirely neutral position - it means that society is not taking a side (so to speak) in preferential terms between one religion or another nor between religious and non religious people.
I on the other hand am not against having a secular side to society as long as the spiritual side is recognised.
And while individuals have a spiritual side that will always be recognised - but that doesn't require spiritualism to be formally embedded in the societal structures, any more than atheism, vegetarianism, post-marxism, neo-liberalism etc etc should be formally embedded in societal structures. As soon as you start doing that (and you cannot do it for every -ism) you end up with a society that is seen to have a institutional preference for one -ism over another - you end up with societally-sanctioned special privileges and discrimination.