Gulliamo said:
And then what happened after them? Once the scared and unwashed masses started voting the canidates took a dive for the worse? Or is it that the original people, especially the religeous people, wanted complete separation of church and state and so an atheist or deist president seemed like a good idea (meaning a guy who wouldn't try to impliment his religious beliefs as federal law).
I honestly have no idea how long it's been that candidates loudly proclaim their unfalsifyable belief in a supreme deity, presumably one that millions of others call the smae name and go to the same orginization to communicate with.
Some would consider it evidence of divine providence that during the exact correct time in history in the precise places required, a group of extremely intelligent and capable men were able to found the nation that later became the richest and most powerful. Of course, some of these men would not believe in a being who would so interfere as to create their situation, which is only evidence that God is very good at covering His/Her tracks. It's kinda like why all fossil, biological, geological and genetic evidence is more or less consistent with the theory of evolution, but the infallible word of the noninterventionalist/psychopathic smiting God(s) say otherwise.
I digress, of course.
From what little I have read and from what less I can accurately recount, I would say that the early Federal government was much more lax about putting in references to religious motives or meaning behind laws and other such things. Certainly state and municipal governments were. The First Amendment today is interpreted much more strictly then it need be.
I should also like to point out that the phrase "seperation of church and state" doesn't appear in the US Constitution, it is an artifact of the First Amendment, Some Other Clause I can't Remember, and court precedent (yes, to all you non-Americans, we do live in one of those goofy countries where an idiot judge can screw up subsequent cases). [stereotypical right wing tip] In fact, if we wanted to, we could have children pray in schools! It's not establishing a religion it's erm... [/stereotypical right wing tip] [stereotypical left wing girly man] just another example of America's progress and understanding, moving with the times for increased political correct-ness! [stereotypical left wing girly man]
To the honorable thaiboxerken:
While the political climes of today herd atheists, agnostics and deists together, I would see them as very different animals on thier own. An atheist who by definition does not believe in a deity, or posits a distinct vacancy in that region of the universe's staff, is on paper the oppisite of someone who considers the entirety of everything around them to be the product of God.
Of course, in this world, there are folks (sometimes violent and more than a little pushy) who not only take for granted the existence of a deity, but also attribute daily occurences to that deity. They also don't think highly of (read: burn) those who think otherwise. The shear predominance of these people, as well as (as you point out) similarities between the moral beliefs of atheists, agnostics and deists is what lumps them together.
Hey, if you've got strange bedfellows, that at least means there's someone in bed with you. That doesn't happen every day, so have fun whilst it lasts!
End clairification
As far as he issue of atheist/agnostic/deist (why yes, I am often a left wing politically correct girly-man, why do you ask?) politicla solidarity and organization goes, I would suggest that the level of sentiment against these groups is low enough now (read: they don't burn us in the US) that there is not a large call for much organization. Furthermore, an atheist being someone whodoesn't believe in God (really, that's the only qualification, eating babies is secondary) there is no universal and coherant outlook on politics that is often present in other religions/non-religions/cults.