Last month I posted data showing that, of all the things that might disqualify someone for public office, being an atheist is tops. I wrote: “Prejudice against those who say there’s no god is stronger than ageism, homophobia, and sexism.” On average, Americans would rather vote for someone who admitted to smoking pot or had an extramarital affair.
We just don’t like atheists.
But who is “we”?
A survey by the Pew Research Center asked Americans of varying religious affiliations how they felt about each other. atheists were most disliked by Protestants, especially White evangelicals and Black Protestants (somewhat less so White Mainline Protestants). Atheists quite liked themselves, and agnostics thought were they were okay. Among other religiously affiliated groups, Jews gave atheists the highest rating.
For what it’s worth, atheists feel warmish toward Jews in return, preferring them to everyone except Buddhists, and they dislike Evangelical Christians almost as much as the Christians dislike them.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 43
Bill R — July 19, 2014
Forget about us atheists. The real headline here is that people form a dramatic like and dislike of each other based on in-group/out-group religious affiliation.
One of the roots of evil, organized religion never fails to pit one group against another for their own gain. Disgusting...and so unnecessary.
mimimur — July 19, 2014
This needs to be kept in mind every time people bring up the suposedly "rabid" atheists who can't carry a meaningful conversation. It's bad enough that atheism itself challegnes the fundamentals of most people's world view, meaning that even with a "nicer" tone what they're saying is extreme. But atheists have had the religious world view pushed on them their entire lives, in one way or another, and for the side with that massive power to frown on them getting angry over it is really beyond petty.
Atheists and Immorality - Page 2 — July 19, 2014
[…] beliefs and narratives. Reading that reminded me of something I read earlier this week on the Sociological Images blog about which groups, specifically, dislike/distrust atheists the most and least. It's got a table […]
RichardPrins — July 19, 2014
But then Jews can call themselves Jewish and yet be an atheist. And Jewish can sort of be divided like Protestants are (reform, orthodox, etc.) so there isn't much information to be gained from just "Jewish".
Beth Day — July 19, 2014
There were no Muslims, Buddhists, or Hindus asked, but 'nothing in particulars' were included? I'm not sure I am reading your chart correctly.
SpidersilkKevlar — July 19, 2014
I love how Paganism of any branch is never included in charts like these.
Why are Christians so negative toward Atheists? | Christianity Simplified — July 19, 2014
[…] http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/07/19/saturday-stat-wait-who-dislikes-atheists/ […]
Skyblue — July 20, 2014
As a Muslim, its not clear to me why the focus is on atheists as the most hated group when clearly Muslims win this oppression olympics. Whether in the aggregate or broken down, Muslims scored lower than atheiests. Was this part of a larger sociological study on athiests I wonder? That’s the only reasonable conclusion I can take after seeing this explanation that ignores the most glaring conclusion of the statistics. Either that or the authoress herself chooses ignore Islamophobia for some reason.
Kolio — July 20, 2014
i think the odd results about the jews come out of "jewish" being an identity more than a religious devotion. Probably about half of the jews asked were in fact atheists and thats why their perceptions chart looks halfway like that of the atheists. And vice versa, many of the other groups would be thinking about non-religious jews they've met or being well known.
Sandy MacDonald — July 21, 2014
But nobody has time for them Presbyterians...
Quiet_Desperation — July 24, 2014
Perhaps atheists aren't oppressed - not sure - but they are certainly the victim of bigotry. It's unimaginable right now that a professed atheist could be elected president, despite his or her qualifications. Its the belief that dare not speak its name. If you're excluded de facto from public office because of belief, that's certainly prejudice at work.
sas — July 25, 2014
Imagine all the people living for today....