No it isn't.
Panto season isn't for months, yet.
Of course irreligion is privileged.
Because of the reserved seats we currently have for one particular religious outlook, you mean? I fail to understand how you can suggest that privileges irreligion.
How much time do you envisaged should be spent on spiritual issues?
Very little. As you've established, spiritual advice is the purview of the church, not parliament. If, as you suggest, parliament is not considering spiritual issues, why do we need special seats for spiritual consideration of those issues?
Regardless, though, the agenda of the Lords is largely determined by the activity of the Commons, not the make-up of the upper chamber, and the Lords then deal with whatever is passed to them. Why, if the issue that arises is 'spiritual' do we need a crack unit of 'Ethereal Commandos' to handle it, but when it's a matter of science, art, sexuality, food standards, health and safety or electoral reform we can make do with Michelle Mone?
The amount of time religion should get reserved on BBC as recommended by the National Secular Society ie none?
Sounds good to me, given the impartial stance the BBC's mandate imposes on it. Would they then completely divest themselves of religious content, perhaps, but they wouldn't be forced to, whereas currently they're forced to conduct religious programming even if there's no appetite or need for it.
No, your argument is redolent of Johnson and Trump with it's premature and gaderene rush to proroge the Lords Spiritual and it's deviousness in not coming clean on the antitheist agenda and it's hypocritical approach to privilege.
Do you think there's anyone that's convinced you have an argument in the background when you throw out ad hominems like that? If you have an actual point, make it.
And while we're about it, Humanist UK with it's ''all religious people welcome, come, come and we shall give the religious rest'' mullarky one minute and it's ''we are proud to be involved in the atheist bus campaign'' schtick the next.
Is it too confusing to you that a group with a political purpose might attempt to appeal to people on both sides of the theism question? Secularism is not equivalent to atheism, it just feels like to you because you're steeped in that victim mentality of 'they're trying to take my religion away'. No-one is coming for your religion, we're just wanting you, and yours, to stop forcing it on other people; in schools, in parliament, on the national broadcaster.
All you are doing is cutting down on religion and spirituality and expanding the atheist environment. That is incontravertable.
Yes it is. Is it justifiable is the relevant question, and I'd say it is, and increasingly so as the proportion of the religious in this country drops, and even more increasingly when the entrenched privilege of religion that's being addressed is not even religion at large but one particular cult.
Which is the long version of 'that still doesn't sound like an attempt to justify the Lords Spiritual in their own right, it just sounds like someone railing against the prospect of change'.
O.