Humanists tell Non religious what they ought to put on the Census.
https://humanism.org.uk/2021/03/18/how-census-results-are-used-to-justify-discrimination-against-the-non-religious/
How is this not a complaint of persecution?
Nope - this is merely a response to a question widely accepted to be leading and biased, which implies a non-equivalence between having a religious belief and not having one.
The census question is: 'What is your religion?' - which is non-neutral with the inherent implication that people have a religion.
Other surveys ask a neutral preliminary question with a yes/no answer, such as 'Do you have a religious belief?', followed by a subsidiary question if you answer 'yes' in which you indicate what that belief is.
When the question is asked in a neutral manner there tends to be a reduction in those appearing to be religious of nigh on 10% compared to the use of the non-neutral census question.
The main justification from the ONS for the current census question is that it is short enough to fit within the space limits of the questionnaire, which seems doubly bizarre given that we are strongly encouraged to complete the census on-line where there are no such space constraints.
All HumanismUK is doing is to suggest that people who aren't religious say so, and not think they should respond to 'What is your religion?' by ticking the box of a religion they might have been brought up in by long since rejected.
What is the problem with trying to get accurate results in the census ... unless of course you are trying to preserve religious privilege on the basis of an over-inflated assessment of religiosity in the UK.