FFRF Gives Alabama Its First Ever Atheist Billboard

By Freedom From Religion Foundation , Protecting Church and State Separation - June 25, 2009

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A 14x48-foot billboard emblazoned with the John Lennonesque message, "Imagine No Religion," and a stained-glass window backdrop, went up this week for one month on I-20, near the Riverside exit en route to Talladega.

Drivers going to Talladega from Atlanta or Birmingham will pass the billboard, believed to be the first such freethought (atheist, agnostic) message ever placed in Alabama.

The colorful billboard went up just in time for the annual "Glorious 4th" celebration in rural Talledega sponsored by the Alabama Freethought Association this year on July 3-5. The event is held at a freethought "advance" (not retreat), which includes a lake, and air-conditioned auditorium and facilities. The event has attracted as many as 200 freethinkers from the South and all over the United States.

The billboard is part of a national educational campaign sponsored by the Freedom From Religion Foundation, the nation's largest association of freethinkers (atheists and agnostics), which works to keep church and state separate. The state/church watchdog has 13,600 members, and the Alabama Freethought Society is an FFRF chapter.

"There are many atheists and agnostics in America, including Alabama, and we want them to know they are not alone. We'd also like to invite believers to imagine a world free from religious wars, sectarian strife, and superstition," said Annie Laurie Gaylor, Foundation Co-President.

"We can have a better world without religion, by placing our energies in making this world, our only world, a better place, instead of investing our best efforts in trying to get to achieve a make-believe afterlife."

"Like John Lennon, I've found that nature and reality are enough for me. I, too, like to imagine no religion, no hell below us, above us only sky. The only afterlife that should concern us is a secure and pleasant future for our descendants," said Dan Barker, author of Godless: How an Evangelical Preacher Became One's America's Leading Atheists.
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OPINION: FFRF Gives Alabama Its First Ever Atheist Billboard

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  • Parcanman
    I don't like this one

    This billboard does nothing except for continue the idea that all Atheists hate religious people. This billboard will do nothing to help Atheists, it will only anger religious people and make them blame us more. The other billboard FFRF has been putting up, the one that says "Don't believe in god ? you're not alone" seems like a much better one to use since it only targets Atheists living in the religious community and won't stir up as much of a backlash towards Atheists.

    - ParcanmanUS June 25, 2009 3:18PM

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  • UrsulaMinor
    right idea, wrong implementation

    I'm glad that they are doing this, and I'm not overly concerned about angering religious people - If someone is so unreasonable as to get steaming mad over something like this, then I'm glad that other people can see them behave this way. In any case, a timid campaign would be ignored - too much caution would make this an enormous waste of money .

    However, I don't like the stained glass background - all I can think of when I see this is " Imagine no religion - we'd have no more stained glass windows or gorgeous, over the top architecture as sponsored by the coffers of churches throughout the ages?" The history of art is far too tied up with the history of religion for me to see this particular implementation of ' No religion' as a positive one. Religion is responsible for worse things than sponsoring craftsmen to put coloured glass between pieces of lead in a window.

    - UrsulaMinorCA June 25, 2009 5:34PM

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  • tek
    secret handshake

    I have to agree that the message on the board will only be understood by us (the non-believers) travelling by at 75 mph. If people don't see the Freedom From Religion at the bottom, I think they will interpret it in the exact opposite fashion.

    But then again, it is really for us anyway and not some conversion method. Besides, it beats the "you are going to hell" billboards everywhere else.

    - tek June 26, 2009 2:54AM

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  • learnlogic
    Nice Idea

    I think this is a nice idea. There is significant presence of religious propaganda in society today, so why not offer some opposing views as long as it is peaceful? However, I believe it will largely be shrugged off by people of religion because:
    1. they will consider it only the product of atheists
    or
    2. many people do not understand that you can have faith without following an organized religion.

    - learnlogicUS June 26, 2009 7:32AM

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  • Mariano
    More atheism as anti-theism...

    Indeed, this is yet another expression of atheism as anti-theism: all negative all the time.
    It is good for the publicity hounds at the FFRF but gives a bad name to the friendly atheist next door.
    “Imagine no religion ”—don’t have to “imagine” but only have to consider the 20th century; the most secular and bloodiest century in human history.

    Yet, this is form the same Dan Barker who positively affirms God’s non-existence and seeks converts:
    http://atheismisdead.blogspot.com/2008/12/addendum-to-dan-barker-and-neo-pagan.html

    - MarianoUS June 29, 2009 9:05AM

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  • SteveY
    Yes, It's a Good Idea!

    I like the billboard! It invites people to consider NOT having religion in their lives, like John Lenon suggested. And it has the website FFRF.org right there on the sign so that you can find out more about it if you want to.
    I look forward to seeing the sign on my way to the FFRF July 4th Celebration near Talladega! (I live in Atlanta.)
    - Steve

    - SteveYUS June 30, 2009 8:41PM

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