Vlad,
Are you saying that people who only claim have some affiliation with a religion have been lying on the census?
No, he’s saying that the way the census is structured biases toward false positives.
As far as I can see the census questions obtain the information useful for planning and policy and those proposed by Humanist UK don't.
Then you’re not seeing clearly. The Humanist UK proposal would precisely give information useful for planning because that planning would be less likely to be justified by false positives
And I can see why because imho the humanist uk line of enquiry picks up merely what is intellectually and emotionally held rather than the practical connections people have with religion.
Gibberish. The Humanist UK “line of enquiry” is simply intended to enable the census to reflect more accurately the public’s religious beliefs (or lack of them).
In other words when people say they are not religious that could cover up use of churches for baptisms, weddings and funerals, attendance at church events, use of church schools, use of church halls etc.
No it wouldn’t. If the census authors wanted to know about the use of church buildings for some reason they could ask that question. That’s not what they do though – they actually ask about religious
beliefs, and their results shape policies. And the problem with that of course is that someone with no religious convictions at all but who’d rather get married in a pretty church than a grim registry office would find himself part of the constituency used to justify faith schools, bishops in the HoL, legally mandated acts of worship in state schools etc.