Jeremy,
So you say, but I had no trouble reading the question and selecting "no religion" from the options displayed to me.
No doubt, but lots of people it seems do. This from the article Vlad linked to:
“
A recent YouGov poll for Humanists UK asked respondents the same religion question as the census and then fired off additional inquiries to those who selected Christian. Fifty-nine per cent said they selected it because they were christened. Forty four per cent said it was because one of their parents was Christian. Clearly many thought of it as a cultural category.
When it came to the actual contents of the Christian faith – the “belief” part of religion – the results plummeted. Just 34 per cent said it was because they “believe in the teachings of Christianity”. Only 27 per cent said they “believe that Jesus Christ was a real person who died and came back to life, and was the son of God”. When it came to practice, the numbers fell even further. Most people who ticked Christian either never attended a place of worship or did so less than once a year.”
The point here is first that the way a question is framed heavily influences the answer it produces, and second that policy makers will rely on the false positives the census as it’s currently framed will give them to justify all sorts of things that in fact many people who ticked "CofE" or whatever would not agree to if the question had been asked more neutrally.
The question, as stated, is a bit ambiguous…
It’s worse than that. The evidence suggests that it will significantly distort the accuracy of the data it provides.
…and I can't criticise Vlad too harshly because I can sort of see his point of view.
I can. He’s arguing that less accurate data is better than more accurate data provided the former happens to justify his faith views.
That’s a bad argument I think.
I stopped believing in God when I was twenty, but I carried on regarding myself as being in the C of E for several years after that. If C of E had been an option in the 1991 census, I might have ticked that option, instead of "no religion".
Yes, but the point here is this: on the basis of the data the census is biased toward producing, would "cultural religionists" (for want of a better term – ie people who like the buildings, the music etc but don't believe any of the faith's various tenets to be true) also be content to be part of the constituency then used to justify policies on faith schools, on gay adoption, on clerics by right in the legislature etc?
Given the alleged origin of the question, maybe a better one would have been "Are you a Muslim?"
Only if you’d been asked first, “do you have religious beliefs?”
Imagine that, say, the gov’t wanted to build a football stadium in every town and to justify that policy had on the census the question “Which sport interests you the most? Football? Tennis? Cricket?" etc and when, say, 51% said “football” (because they had even less interest in the other sports, or their Dad was a Spurs fan, or football was the sport most played at their school etc) they used that 51% to justify building the stadia.
Now imagine instead that the Census asked. “Do you have any interest in sport? If “No”, ignore the next question”, and this time the next question (about which sports respondents are interested in) had only 25% tick “Football?”
That’s the point here. Questions biased towards false positives (no matter what the subject) will be used to justify policies that wouldn’t see the light of day without those false positives.
Vlad it seems favours that provided the false positives justify policies geared toward his religious beliefs, though my guess is that he’d be less keen on policies made on the same basis in any other area of public life.