Firedragon,
The nones include theists/deists, agnostics and atheist. A very small proportion of them are atheists.
Also, consider:
Global decline of nones in the 21st Century
See also: Growth of Christianity in China
According to the Pew Research Forum:
“ These projections, which take into account demographic factors such as fertility, age composition and life expectancy, forecast that people with no religion will make up about 13% of the world’s population in 2050, down from roughly 16% as of 2010.
This is largely attributable to the fact that
religious “nones” are, on average, older and have fewer children than people who are affiliated with a religion...
China, with its large population and lack of reliable data on religious switching,
is something of a wild card when it comes to the future of world religion. This is especially true for the religiously unaffiliated population; more than half of the world’s people who do not identify with any religion live in China (roughly 700 million).
Some experts believe the Christian population in China is rising while the religiously unaffiliated population is falling. If this is true – and the trend continues – religious “nones” could decline as a share of the world’s population even more than the Pew Research Center study projects.
[4]
”
Eric Kaufmann told a secular audience in Australia: "The trends that are happening worldwide inevitably in an age of globalization are going to affect us."
[5] Furthermore, Kaufmann also argues that secularization may reverse itself significantly earlier than 2050 in the West due to religious immigration and a religious population which is increasingly resistant to secularization in Europe.
[6]
Percentage of nones expected to stabilize in the United States
Eric Kaufmann wrote:
“ The same is true in the United States. “Nones” may be the third-largest religious group in the United States, and ex-Catholics the fourth-largest, but the switching story needs a demographic context. If America remained 70 percent white, the population would reach European levels of secularization in two generations and Catholics would rapidly lose market share to Protestants. Instead, swift Hispanic and Asian population growth is projected to stabilize the share of nonreligious Americans at roughly today’s levels.
[7]
Nones and poor survey design
Research shows that a significant amount of American nondenominational church members are checking "unaffiliated" or "no religion" on surveys.
Pat Neff Hall at
Baylor University.
Based on research done by
Baylor University, a February 2011 article entitled
Good News about Evangelicalism declares:
“ Nondenominational churches, almost exclusively
evangelical, now represent the second-largest group of Protestant churches in America, and the fastest growing section of the American religious market...
This trend has affected popular statistics and has also served to exaggerate the loss of religious faith and evangelical influence in America. Most previous research missed a new phenomenon: that members of nondenominational churches often identify themselves on surveys as unaffiliated or even as having “no religion.” Because traditional surveys do not provide categories that adequately describe those who attend nondenominational congregations, their members often check “unaffiliated” in typical surveys and questionnaires...
Similarly, claims that Americans, including evangelicals, are falling away from the faith contradict seven decades of survey research confirming that only 4 percent of Americans are atheists...
...We found no statistically significant difference between younger and older evangelicals on other moral and political issues, however. Younger evangelicals were, in fact, sometimes more conservative than their elders.
...The number of evangelicals remains high, and their percentage among practicing Christians in America is, if anything, rising.
[11]
Source:
http://www.conservapedia.com/Nones#Global_decline_of_nones_in_the_21st_Century