I think Outrider links happiness to the rolling back of religion.
The data links happiness to secularism, I just publicise the correlation.
Whether that is right is another matter.
It's right, that's what the data shows. Whether one is causative of the other, or whether they are both the result of something else like financial stability, a robust welfare system, lower levels of inequality or widespread uptake of further education is certainly open to debate though.
Secularism = making religion a private matter rather than a PRIVILEGED matter? Do you not mean ''Rather than a public matter''?
No, you can entertain your beliefs in public, but they do not hold any weight in the law - your right to them might (I'd advocate that) but not the content of them.
What an odd thing to say. The exclusion of privilege is not even implicit in secularisation is it.
Religious privilege, yes, that's basically the entirety of secularism. Privilege more broadly, no.
Surely the whole process of secularisation privileges non religion.
No. If you have another belief, one that's not in any way religious, and it also has no demonstrable basis, that's equally ignored by the law. Baseless claims with a religious basis have been afforded a privilege, historically, that other baseless claims have not - removing that privilege is not giving privilege to someone else, it's levelling the field. You want the law to recognise your wants, give a reason why anyone else should be bound by it.
Can you give an example of any situation where equality of religion with non religion is guaranteed, first question.
In Great Britain, currently, marriage.
To me once you say you can observe your religion in private, that implies you shouldn't observe it in public in exactly the same way you shouldn't take a dump in public or have sex in public.
Well, if your particular religious beliefs are as obnoxious as the other examples you should probably think about that, but the overwhelming majority of the religious are not Christian Voice or the like. You should observe your religion wherever you choose - it's private so far as the law is concerned.
You would however be free to wear a sandwich board with ''Sam Harris latest takedown of religion'' or drive the atheist bus around.
Or Bible quotes. Or sounding out the call to Friday prayers. You couldn't, though, expect the government to prohibit sales of beef because you think cows are holy...
where can these be seen?
Ooh, ooh, sir, ooh, sir, me sir, pick me sir...
My approach is I hope you have noticed is slightly different in that secularisation and the rollback of religion is touted as promising us shangri la which ain't happening.
It's a step in the right direction. It won't take us all the way, there are still any number of social and cultural influences - some explicitly religious in origin, some which have been adopted by religious traditions, some of which happen to coincide with religious traditions - which we could do with eradicating or stifling, and at the same time there are some elements of religious tradition which it would be a shame to lose.
I also predate the internet when atheists were less triggered and frankly less sneery IMHO.
You mean when public information was carefully curated by institutions with a vested interest in placating the authorities, and atheist voices were discounted and not heard at all?
The power and roll of the church in the UK has been greatly exaggerated
Then nothing will be lost by a tendency towards secularism, so what is it that you're so 'triggered and ... sneery' about?
O.