HonestJoe is a loser. Just because someone votes him a winner doesn't make him a winner.
That's a little harsh. As it happens I disagree with the OP (on pretty much everything) and they're misrepresenting or misunderstanding (I've given up trying to work out which) what I meant by that statement.
They clarify to say that there are certain types of atheism that are rational but what is called Gnostic Atheism ("we know there is no God") is irrational.
Yes, it was a click-bait headline which you're using for it's intended purpose. They may well have made other relevant points but they marketed it on the back of a lie.
1. An agnostic claims to not know for certain about religion, while an atheist claims to not believe in God but if often closer to an antitheist.
I don't like any of these labels but that is what they are. They don't describe what a person
claims, they describe what a person believes. They might not even be consciously aware of their belief or to be able to put it into words, the label would still apply.
2. In fact, an atheist cannot consistently decide anything about itself. Is it a religion or not?
You're mixing your objects there. An atheist is a person, who may or may not be able to decide anything about themselves. Their atheism on it's own is unlikely to have much if any impact on that. Each individual has thousands of different characteristics, experiences and thoughts which combine to form their decisions. Whether they believe in any kind of god in itself is a minor factor.
Atheism is a concept and so can't decide anything at all. Whether atheism is called a religion or not is down to people, atheist and not. My personal opinion is that it obviously isn't, in the same way theism isn't a religion. An atheist (like a theist) can be religious and atheism (like theism) can form an element of a religion but that doesn't make atheism (or theism) a religion in an of itself. It certainly doesn't make it
a single religion.
Of course, none of that need be in any way relevant to any given individual who happens to not believe in any gods. The vast majority of such people never come close to getting involved in these discussions after all.
3. It claims to be on the side of science, but when used to oppose the notion of God, it willfully dismisses laws of science when they no longer are convenient.
Again, atheism is a concept so it can't claim anything. Some atheists might claim stupid things but then some theists claim stupid things too. That isn't an atheism thing, it's a human thing.
So "matter cannot be created or destroyed" except when it comes to the Big Bang, then it can just do whatever it wants. Or we have evolution, only in every case where society tried to impose a survival of the fittest model, it has been a tyranny, and its days are number.
None of that has anything to do with belief in gods or atheism.
4. The idea of atheism is inherently irrational. Anything that exists comes from an origin, and there are no known exceptions to this...
Well you've already noted the distinction of "gnostic atheism", distinct from the more general (and
much more common) casual "not believing". The latter makes absolutely no reference to the need for some kind of origin for existence, only about the concept of gods specifically. It would be perfectly possible for there to be some kind of origin, even an intelligent one, that wouldn't fit our current concept of a god.
You see, the problem of Big Bang...
Your problem with the Big Bang is that is has nothing to do with the topic of the thread. There could have been a Big Bang triggered by a god or there could have been no Big Bang and no god. It's a moot point here.
5. The Bible says that the unbelievers are under a "powerful delusion."
Something of a biased source don't you think?
I know this to be true for certain, as I've seen atheists reject pages and pages of information contrary to their opinions, and they simply ignore this to continue saying what they think is true.
Again, just because some people who happen to be atheist do irrational things doesn't mean atheism makes people irrational. Some theists do irrational things too but that doesn't mean theism makes people irrational either. We're all capable of being irrational as a consequence of being flawed human beings (that was the actual point I was making in the quote that triggered this thread).
6. During this disease hysteria, the least fearful have been (real) theists, who insisted that it's just a bug going around, and it's fairly mild. The atheists I've talked to ignore completely any reasoned attempts to convince them that hoarding and job loss caused by an extreme fear reaction are at least as dangerous, deciding to literally buy 50 rolls of toilet paper and collapse the supply chain.
Yet again, you're treating the (cherry-picked) actions of a few individuals and labelling vast groups of other individuals as a consequence. It's wrong to do that on the basis of race, gender or religion and it's wrong to do is on the basis of belief (or non belief) in gods.
You're also ignoring that there were some religious people actively promoting bad behaviour, with negative consequences (such as the outbreak among a church group in South Korea or the televangelist pastor in the US claiming to sure COVID-19 through the TV screen). Their actions don't reflect badly on any other Christians, religious people or theists though, they are entirely individual to those individuals.