By Saswat Pattanayak
Atheists are identified as
America’s most distrusted minority.
Americans rate atheists below Muslims, recent
immigrants, gays and lesbians and other minority
groups in “sharing their vision of American
society.”
Atheists are also the minority group most
Americans are least willing to allow their children
to marry.
Even though atheists are few in number, not
formally organized and relatively hard to publicly
identify, they are seen as a threat to the American
way of life by a large portion of the American
public.
Today’s atheists play the role that
Catholics, Jews and communists have played in the
past—they offer a symbolic moral boundary to
membership in American society
Respondents associated atheism with an array
of moral indiscretions ranging from criminal behavior
to rampant materialism and cultural elitism.
“Atheists, who account for about 3 percent of
the U.S. population, offer a glaring exception to the
rule of increasing social tolerance over the last 30
years,” says Penny Edgell, associate sociology
professor and the study’s lead researcher.
(Findings by the University of Minnesota, March
2006. To appear in the April issue of the American
Sociological Review.)
Diversity in America is an oxymoron. Because the
ideals that shaped the libertarian (and its
varieties) thoughts of the founding fathers were
necessarily a celebration of the marketplace. At
times the marketplace was considered to be a civic
space (as Jefferson would have wanted), and in more
recent times, maybe a corporate space. But
throughout, the stress on individual liberty in a
marketplace of ideas has remained a defining hallmark
of the American society.
In its simplicity, this is of course not quite such
an acceptable proposition. For, if the aims of
individual liberties were to sustain a socially
desirable good, then it just implies that protection
of those liberties will eventually result in these
goods. However on closer examination, what is
socially desirable are often times not the product of
individual liberty prerogatives. Else, pornography
industry and market monopolies would then have to be
declared as socially good produce. So the
checks on individual liberty (the practice) then
become crucial to promotion of social good (the
goal).
Individual liberties, being necessary corollaries of
the marketplace, are thus, embedded with its
ideologies. But the marketplace is never free, since
it’s determined by the dominant actors there. Since
the time America became torchbearer of individual
liberties, there has been no marketplace of free
access. First it was the class of slaveowners who
flagrantly violated every possibly known human ethos
of freedom thus restricting the marketplace to the
same audience that Greece had, during its mythical
democracy.
Then came the conservative moderators of the
marketplace who while professing free values actually
never shared the ownership of the free values with
the subjects—hence no rights worth the bill were
passed on to the freed slaves, the immigrants, the
women and people needing special care. Here again,
freedom meant a compliance to marketplace norms than
a participation of an equal level.
In the third wave of freedom struggles of the 60’s,
the marketplace set its own libertarian rules. Ghosts
of McCarthy ruled the policies. Second class citizens
and disenchanted black youths were the targets for
immediate compliance. The liberties, in order to be
relished, had to be subsumed as a trickled down grant
than an inherent right.
Today, even as the individual liberties are being
celebrated, the critical lens should suggest that
they are the sustainers of the dominant marketplace
player than anything else. Because just as the
realization that certain individual liberties (like
vandalism) should be curbed in order that they don’t
flagrantly violate social good, and certain
individual liberties (like appealing in the courts)
should be encouraged so that the people don’t come on
the roads, again to violate social good; what is
crucial to know is that not all individuals have
equal historical conditions of privilege allowing
them enough “access” freedom to practice and
“control” their realm of freedom.
This realization has come to acknowledge that
upholding of individual liberties (lets say of the
KKK) often can end up in curtailing the social good
of the group liberties of some historically
dispossessed (lets say of the colored people). The
benefits of identity, then does not lie on
individual’s prerogatives, but on the historically
oppressed individual’s potential as a progressive
group member/champion.
However this idea of promoting the minority groups’
causes then violates the essential framework of
marketplace concept, which relies on promotion of
individual liberties. Since the marketplace is
governed by individual rules, and the dominant actors
are the individuals who have infinitely greater
influence on the market rules owing to their
historical advantages, it is no wonder that to uphold
the existing rules, it is desirable for them to
further them too. So, implicitly the marketplace then
promotes the values of naked individualisms—which
benefit the individuals who have both access and
control over the fruits of their liberty. For
example, if the women are excluded as a group to
vote, then the marketplace is free in its theoretical
rules, but only in that it lets the men do the
voting. Likewise today, the rules around the new
immigrants is that the old immigrants who have had a
say so far in the marketplace are professors of
freedom, but only in terms of what appears to them as
legitimate.
This internal contradiction of free marketplace that
frames its own rules, promotes them through excluding
certain players who want group freedom as well as
individual freedom (thereby asking for recognition
also as their identities in groups—LGBT,
Latino/a, etc).
And the most chilling example is the marketplace of
“Secular” state, where the actors surely claim a
separation of church from the state, but only so as
to theoretically uphold their argument of individual
liberty. That is, if someone does not wish to join a
prayer session in a school, it could be considered ok
(although it’s also far from real). But what it has
effectively done to promote its dominant actor class
character is explicitly weave the market around its
own set of rules. So what we have are educational
institutions (including public universities) that
host quite a few chapels. What we have are public
gatherings where people are asked to seek blessing of
Jesus to join the dinner. Recently when I went to
attend an award ceremony for Women of Color inside
the university campus, before the dinner was served,
in a matter-of-fact way it was asked of the audience
to show gratitude to Jesus. Considering the vast
numbers of Christian organizations and their
representatives (quite of few of them keep knocking
my apartment doors to talk of God’s grace) who have
been historically present, in furthering their
causes, the reality is that there are not many
non-Christian organizations to even provide a fare
trade balance.
The problem area is this, while within the
marketplace, the Christian rights are considered
individual liberties (and hence the state vs “church”
legalities), the rights of the other religious
identities are considered as group liberties. And a
marketplace dominated by worshippers of individual
liberties (of the comfortable right-blinds), the
group dynamic creates conflicts. It creates even more
conflicts when it comes to the alternative identity
beyond the interfaith tradition:
the
atheists.
Atheists just do not belong to the marketplace of
free expression, because there is no leveling field
out there. They are not instituted as anything (there
is Islamic Studies, for example, not Atheistic
Studies). They are not fostered as anything (there
are state-sponsored minority religion ceremonies, not
of Atheistic Award for Unity). They are not even
acclaimed as anything (no governmental efforts are
directed towards recognizing their philosophies).
Not just a complete lack of political will, but a
near normalization of abhorrence towards anything
related to atheism has historically bred contempt,
and now breeding indifference (which is even worse,
since the contends do not get discussed anymore).
Films are not made to portray the sub-cultures of
atheism, there is no funding for “advancement of
atheism discourse”. Overall speaking, the dearth of
popular knowledge on the subject of challenge to the
structure and function of faith systems just are not
allowed to exist in a society driven by the
gatekeepers of its mythical free marketplace: since
the key elements of power structure personally
propagate their belief.
One wonders why no leader of any repute ever ends
addresses as saying “Blessed be my Color” (the race
discourse), whereas every leader of any repute starts
with “God bless you all” (the religious discourse).
For, the assumption is that the people have been
conditioned enough to accept the God dynamic, since
this has been the founding cornerstone of Western
civilization (which has, for the records, merely gone
ahead and ‘converted’ through will or coercion
millions of people of various ‘races’ into a
religious fold, including spectacularly mass
converting the indigenous people of America on gun
point).
The diversity discourse that exists today then exists
because it is well within the parameters of the
marketplace that legitimizes its recognition, but
does not enforce its institution. So what we lack
from the parlance of diversity are the elements that
stand to challenge (which turns the question on its
head) than to merely oppose (which forms a healthy
continuum).
If the United States really needs to emerge out of
the comfortable space of assumption making about
human natures, then it will do well to promote the
rich alternative thoughts that exist within western
rational, eastern material, a worldly spiritual
(devoid of religious adherence), and an earthly
tribal tradition.
For, anything other than that, including a prolonged
silence on the issue or even a complete absence of
atheistic outlook from the power structures
(considering that atheists would want to be ‘group’ed
than individualized) will perpetuate vast regressive
myths about atheism (like “oh, but you are so nice…I
don’t believe you are an atheist”, often confusing
moral conducts with religions), and people who
believe not in an organized religion.
Tags: Saswat, Atheism, Philosophy, USA, Capitalism