When I was a kid I first heard about Madalyn Murray O'Hair (O'Hair is the correct spelling apparently). She was considered the most hated woman in America according to Time magazine in 1964 and she was the face of atheism. Read her Wikipedia entry. You'll be shocked at how she lived and the things she did. She was undoubtedly evil, even by my atheist standards (we atheists tolerate evil more so than non-atheists, or so I'm told). She was also butt-ugly, cursed like a sailor, and seemed to hate the world. Although she may have furthered the atheist agenda, she also implanted in the public's mind the perfect image for how an atheist looked and behaved. In other words, she was the best example christians have ever found for what happens to someone when they embrace atheism. Christians could not have been more fortunate than to have Ms. O'Hair against them (divine intervention?).
Ms. O'Hair is the image the last generation had of atheists. Is it any wonder that atheists are considered bad people? Only in the last decade or so have we begun to show that old Maddy didn't speak for us and certainly is not representative of what we believe. Through our works we shall be known.
A few problems with this suggestion...
Firstly, that doesn't actually explain why atheists are supposedly dishonest, this only theorizes why Christians would hate atheists. Granted, they're probably connected, but if I may say so, not exactly an acceptable answer from a Christian perspective.
Secondly, while it might explain the last generation, it doesn't explain this one. It's not as though the attitude has changed. I mean, I didn't know who Madeline O'Hair was, and I'm well-read and atheist. She's not exactly a character at the forefront of today's culture.
Thirdly, while I didn't know who O'Hair was, I do know Katharine Hepburn, Andy Rooney, Larry King, Woody Allen, and Ayn Rand. I also know that all of these people are/were prominent outspoken atheists of that same generation. You're suggesting that Christians would judge all atheists on a single person because she was disliked, while other well-liked, outspoken atheists were in the public eye. It would be positively hypocritical of them, considering that so many Christians are so adament that Christians are not represented by the likes of the Westboro Baptist Church, Pat Robertson or pretty much all of Uganda. It would suggest that O'Hair wasn't chosen because people actually believed she represented atheism, but because she fit the existing characture of an atheist.
Lastly, it seems that this discrimination certainly pre-dates O'Hair. By all accounts, atheists were already well-hated in Senator John McCarthy's 1950's.
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