maybe It Aint Necessarily So is speaking for It Aint Necessarily So himself, rather than for atheists at large.
Yes, I only speak for myself here. I'm sure that many would agree with me, but there are also atheists who consider Christianity a force for good without which the world would be less well of, and some that prefer Christianity cease to exist. I'm neither of those.
What I have found is that atheist, who are human - yes, they are not like beast - animals that depend purely on instinct, they have the same desires as humans, which is to see genuine love being shown to others, and to see people getting along in peace, people being honest in their daily living, etc. etc.
I consider Christianity an impediment to right thinking and right behavior. It's not making the world a better place nor making its adherents better people. They tend to be less well-educated, more tribalistic, less tolerant with its bigotries. I see love and cooperation in humanists. Religion is not necessary, and in my opinion, interferes with intellectual, spiritual, and moral development. Christianity teaches that the world is a bad place and that people are fundamentally sick at birth and need some kind of cleansing without which they deserve eternal gratuitous torture.
So when atheist see people being influenced by their religion, to practice such things, they appreciate that.
As I said, I think people do that better without religion. Of course, I don't expect the theists to notice how constructive the humanists around them are. One of the bigotries many have accepted uncritically is that atheists are immoral. At one time, atheists couldn't teach, coach, adopt, or serve on juries for that reason. Yet humanism appears to be the gold standard and the height of human intellectual and moral development to date which Christians can equal but not exceed. I call such people theistic humanists.
Any law influences people who don't believe in that law.
How does legal abortion influence your life?
Non-Christians try to influence laws that affect Christian and visa versa.
Humanists don't try to impose their ways on anybody except perhaps taxpayers. Humanism is about enabling people, not controlling them.
My freedom from religion doesn't hurt you, but it does help me. I support their effort, which is NOT directed at any believer. If the FFRF called the shots, you could be a Christian and I an atheist. If your church called the shots, well, just look at the Ten Commandments and recent theocratic advances in America. Here are some indications of what the people who Christians admire have in mind for America if they get their way
- "There is a value in spiritual violence," Hagee declared, "and it is time that you considered the role that you are playing or not playing and whether or not it's time for you to become more aggressive in your beliefs" - Matthew Hagee
- "I want you to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good . . . our goal is a Christian nation. We have the biblical duty, we are called on by God to conquer this country. We don't want equal time. We don't want pluralism" - Randall Terry, Director of Operation Rescue
- "The long term goal of Christians in politics should be to gain exclusive control over the franchise. Those who refuse to submit publicly to the eternal sanctions of God by submitting to his Church's public marks of the covenant-baptism and holy communion-must be denied citizenship, just as they were in ancient Israel." - Gary North
- "I hope to see the day when, as in the early days of our country, we won't have any public schools. The churches will have taken them over again and Christians will be running them. What a happy day that will be." - Jerry Falwell
- "There will never be world peace until God's house and God's people are given their rightful place of leadership at the top of the world." - Pat Robertson
- "Our goal must be simple. We must have a Christian nation built on God's law, on the Ten Commandments. No apologies." - Randall Terry
These people don't want to enable others. They want to control them. I'll bet you consider some of these comments examples of good Christian morals and ideas that ought to be made law. I want them making no laws. Let them go off and pray and sing hymns instead.