I have a question for those who live in Europe. I've read that the level of atheism in many countries there tends to be relatively high compared to the Americas (more than 12%). Is this true? What type of atheists would be these, those that simply do not think about gods, or those that negate the existance of gods?
I'm not sure whether they would label themselves as "atheists" as such, but the woman who started the "atheist bus campaign" (her name escapes me at the moment...) was on BBC News this morning and said that at the last census, about 23% of people in the UK answered "none" to the religion question.
Compared to the USA (not sure about the rest of the Americas), the attitudes towards atheists over here is not as aggressive. There are, of course, people fighting on both sides, but in the main, people don't really care. The UK is not so much a Christian country any more. It's quite secular these days, where people are free to belong to whichever religion they wish, or no religion at all, and most people aren't bothered.
I'm an atheist, but my sister belongs to an evangelical Christian church. She (or rather, her family) pays their tithe to the church, goes to church every Sunday and my brother in law takes a very active role. I don't have a problem with that at all. I have no problem with anyone being any particular religion.
However, there are two things that will make me step in and challenge religion - (1) when they try to push their beliefs onto me, and (2) when they spread mistruths deliberately to either boost their own beliefs or undermine others.
Examples of (1) isn't just those people who stand on street corners preaching or come knocking on the door. It also includes advertisements about religion, which is why I don't see the atheist bus campaign, or other atheist advertising as "preaching" as such - I see it as an attempt at pushing back. It's quite funny how (particularly in America) signs which preach eternal damnation in Hell for lack of belief (even if thinly veiled in Biblical verse) are perfectly fine, yet if an atheist sign states that there "probably is no God" is erected, there's an outcry from the local Pastor to the effect that the atheists are being intolerant...
Examples of (2) are pretty obvious - particularly the attempts to get creationism taught in school science lessons. It's been quite high profile in America with the Dover trial, and other state boards (particularly Texas of late). But it's also a battle that is raging in the UK. It's a bit more stealthy here - every now and then the topic will arise. Mostly, though, it gets shot down straight away. But they keep trying, and while they keep trying, we will keep fighting.
On a personal level, I would label myself as an atheist, with the term meaning that I do not see any need for a supernatural being of any kind to have any role in the creation or development of the universe or life within it. I think there are a lot of logical fallacies in theistic belief (that God created the universe and takes an active part in its everyday existence - answering prayers, performing miracles, etc...) whether tied with Biblical creationism (as some of the more fundamental religious people believe), or whether tied with scientific understanding of the universe, as the more liberal religious people believe (e.g. the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Pope, scientists like Ken Miller, etc...). To me, it simply doesn't add up.
But that's my belief. Religious people may well have their own answers to what I perceive as logical fallacies, and that's fine.