But at the moment it still leaves a significant number of the population that do consider themselves religiously affiliated so the case for a wholly secular society with the religion expunged is about as firm as the case for Brexit.
Good thing that's not what's on offer, really. Secularism isn't about 'expunging' religion, it's about not legislating everyone with one groups religious choices.
There seem to be lots a of things that have a pernicious effect and the ''atheist bus ''type case you make is and has proved to be rather simplistic.
Of course there are - some of them have been addressed to one extent or another, sometimes even by religion. At this point in history, though, there's very little that it's adding to society, and a lot that it's holding back, restricting or actively harming.
Apatheists are less likely to call revenge on religion I would imagine.
The people, generally, that I see wanting 'revenge' on religion are people of other religions who think someone else has the wrong one. On the secular/atheist/apatheist/antitheist spectrum that you seem to be peering at no-one wants religion, they want to not have to care at all; they either just want it to keep to itself, or they want it to finish the process of slipping off into obscurity that the Norse, Greek, Roman, Aztec, Inca and so many other religions have already done.
O.