This is the most amazing bit of quote mining I've seen in quite a while - trying to imply that these highly selected quotes taken entirely put of context suggest Dawkins to be aggressively whipping up a militant atheist agenda (whatever that means).
I have not suggested Dawkins is "whipping" up anything. You used the word "whipping", not me so I suggest you don't attribute something to me that I never said. The whole point of my quotes was to say that in the TED talk Dawkins does not suggest that militant atheism is violent or extreme or dangerous. He seems to be using the term 'militant' as part of his language of being at war and as you suggested, which I agree with, you can be at war with an idea or a lobby without being considered violent or dangerous or extreme.
Read the entire talk:
https://ted2srt.org/talks/richard_dawkins_on_militant_atheism
Dawkins only uses the word 'militant' twice - once for a laugh (which is your selected quote, but you failed to indicate it was meant to be humorous), and secondly as part of an anecdote about a person who lived in the 19thC.
And most of the rest of the talk is about levelling the playing field - in other words creating a society in which being atheist is no more or less acceptable than being christian or republican or a Windows user.
Again you are making incorrect assumptions - I did read the entire talk. I think you are misinterpreting the way Dawkins uses the term 'militant atheism'. The anecdote about the person living in the 19th Century - Darwin and Aveling - was important so not sure why you are pretending it is not relevant to this discussion. Dawkins described Aveling as a militant atheist. Can you provide a quote to say that Dawkins disapproved of Aveling for being a militant atheist or thought Aveling did anything violent because of his militant atheism? As far as I can see from the transcript Dawkins does not see militant atheism as suggesting violence but considers it rocking the boat. How are you analysing the following part of the TED talk? Dawkins says as follows:
"He [Darwin] even became uncharacteristically tetchy with Edward Aveling. Aveling was a militant atheist who failed to persuade Darwin to accept the dedication of his book on atheism -- incidentally, giving rise to a fascinating myth that Karl Marx tried to dedicate "Das Kapital" to Darwin, which he didn't, it was actually Edward Aveling. What happened was that Aveling's mistress was Marx's daughter, and when both Darwin and Marx were dead, Marx's papers became muddled up with Aveling's papers, and a letter from Darwin saying, "My dear sir, thank you very much but I don't want you to dedicate your book to me," was mistakenly supposed to be addressed to Marx, and that gave rise to this whole myth, which you've probably heard. It's a sort of urban myth, that Marx tried to dedicate "Kapital" to Darwin.
21:30
Anyway, it was Aveling, and when they met, Darwin challenged Aveling. "Why do you call yourselves atheists?" "'Agnostic, '" retorted Aveling, "was simply 'atheist' writ respectable, and 'atheist' was simply 'agnostic' writ aggressive." Darwin complained, "But why should you be so aggressive?" Darwin thought that atheism might be well and good for the intelligentsia, but that ordinary people were not, quote, "ripe for it." Which is, of course, our old friend, the "don't rock the boat" argument. It's not recorded whether Aveling told Darwin to come down off his high horse.
22:14
(Laughter)
22:16
But in any case, that was more than 100 years ago. You'd think we might have grown up since then.