As promised, I posted at least one atheist quote per day throughout the month of April, and am now (finally) reporting back with the results of my little experiment.
Comments
Comments for all quotes totaled 121 – about half of which were on a single and somewhat inflammatory thread. The remaining comments were dispersed throughout the month averaging about two comments per post.
Likes
The grand total of “likes” came to 126. This includes likes of the actual quote only – not likes of any comments pertaining to the quotes.
Friend Count
Before: 682
After: 674
In order to keep the results as clean as possible, I did not accept or make any friend requests during the entire month of April. All six people who defriended me did it before the experiment was even half over. Honestly, I have no idea which friends defriended me during my experiment or even if it had anything to do with the atheist quotes. I do find it interesting to note, however, that none of my pro-religion friends who engaged in conversation with me actually defriended me during the process. They spoke their minds about my quotes (some more vehemently than others) and are all still members of my social graph.
My Least Favorite Part
It’s super easy to find quotes online by and about atheists. Unfortunately, verifying that the quotes are actually valid and well-cited was a bit of a challenge. I could easily spend up to 20 or 30 minutes trying to verify a really good quote just to find out that the person to whom the quote was attributed was only hearsay.
My Favorite Part
Learning more about famous atheists was incredibly rewarding. I’m completely obsessed with Douglas Adams, yet I had no idea he was an atheist. I also discovered that Robert Heinlein is an atheist, though I probably shouldn’t have been surprised. Ricky Gervais is an intelligent and well-spoken atheist. I was aware that Mark Twain was an atheist, but this experiment inspired me to finally get around to reading Letters from Earth.
Closing Thoughts
It’s funny. I’ve spent years being mostly silent about my views on religion because I hate causing conflict or ruffling feathers. Historically, I’d do anything to keep someone from feeling uncomfortable or unaccepted because of religious beliefs – but this has only resulted in causing myself to feel uncomfortable and unaccepted. Those days are over.
Social etiquette dictates that religion and politics should only be discussed at very specific times – such as at church, on Fox “News”, and random, deep, intellectual, existential conversations with strangers in cafes. And on Facebook. A big thanks to everyone who participated in, encouraged, or barely tolerated my experiment.
…heathen.
And proud! 😛
I heart you!
What this was an experiment? I thought it was for shits and giggles and to get a laugh out of people…..who knew.
Who knew what? 😛
If nothing came out of this besides you being more outspoken then I would say it was a successful experiment!
Hi there! Someone in my Myspace group shared this site with us so I came to check it out. I’m definitely enjoying the information. I’m book-marking and will be tweeting this to my followers! Wonderful blog and terrific design and style.