An atheist regime? Pulleeeese.
I'm not sure what you're attempted to spell there, perhaps it was another internet lol-speak thing. But I'm only using your words with regard to "atheist regime" -thus the scare quotes.
I'm referring to the various nations of the world who have leaders that are atheist or agnostic or for whom religion isn't a factor. The Prime Minister of New Zealand, for instance. Australia even had a PM that was godless in the 1990s as well as a Governor-General.
But the important thing is that there are nations for which religion is *not* a major part of the lives of their citizens, such as New Zealand, Denmark, Sweden, Japan, and Norway where violent crime is extremely low.
You so carefully noted that Denmark, Norway and Finland are in the top ten atheist nations, but you were misleading in your claim that they're the most "crime ridden."
If you take careful note, I mentioned "violent crime," which is the factor of importance. Focusing on violent crimes is important because Western nations, once violent crime has been reduced, have a tendency to report higher instances of far less serious crimes -which were always there, just overshadowed by violent crime.
The violent crime in the nations you chose are far, far lower than in nations that are more afflicted with religion. Indeed, the only Western nation that is overly afflicted with religion exhibits violent crime rates far higher than the rest.
For that, the nations you mentioned had the
lowest violent crime rating. As a source, you can examine the Seventh United Nations Survey of Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems, covering the period 1998 - 2000 (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Centre for International Crime Prevention).
How would you measure the amount of religious fervour in a country? I suppose one way would be to look at rates of church attendance. If you investigate this you will see higher church attendance tends to be somewhat correlated with lower crime rates. Perhaps you have some fantasy that the USA is the most crime ridden country? Not by a long shot.
How to measure "religious fervor?" I rely on the sociological work others and don't actually do the measurements myself -sorry. But you can look over sociologist Phil Zuckerman's work (2005) and he's done a bit of work which is oft quoted by even religious adherents. Church attendance is one method to quantify, but it has its problems.
You keep saying "crime-ridden," but again I'm focusing on factors of violent crime. Why worry about every pencil cup stolen from every office cubicle? Violent crime has been demonstrated time and again to be the factor that once removed allows other crimes to be reported -many social factors are at play here, but sociologists have studied this effect extensively enough that the only factors important for our discussion is violent crimes. But we can even look at "morality" issues which are popular among religious nutters in the U.S.
Among the secular west, only the United States continues to have a high homicide rate (Beeghley 2003; Doyle 2000). Yes, the United States is an "out lier." It's a religious nation -the only among the industrialized nations- with a high homicide and overall crime rate. Nations like Columbia and Portugal also have high crime rates (Pew 2002). They're also religious nations. Many very religious nations in Africa are high in human rights violations. They're also very religious. South Africa consumes more cocaine than any other country in Africa (UN 2001); it's also the fifth most religious, under Senegal, Nigeria, Cote d'Ivoire, and Mali -four nations were human rights violations are a norm (HRW 2006).
The abortion rate in Sweden (in 1996), one of the nations with the leading population of agnostics and atheists was 18.7% compared to that of Australia (22.2%) and the United States (21.3%). If we are to correlate this to religious adherence, then clearly the United States, where 81% of the population considered itself "religious" in 2001 (ARIS 2001), and Australia, where 74% of the population is religious (NCLS 2001), are both nations that should have lower percentages of abortion.
They don't. Moreover, the statistics cited for Swedish abortions in teens in a previous post are a bit misleading. The teen pregnancy rate in Sweden is among the lowest in the world to begin with. There's also the problem with failing to consider other mitigating factors, such as concurrent population growth, which was about 6% from 1996 to 2005 (BFS 2005). Looking at global abortion/pregnancy rates is also revealing.
In the U.S., in 1991, teen pregnancies per 1,000 were 98.0 and total teen abortions, also per 1,000, were 44.4 (Wolf et al 1991). The same year for Sweden yielded 28.3 per 1,000 pregnancies and 19.6 per 1,000 abortions.
Swedish abortions, with 50% increase among teens (National Board of Health and Welfare 2004) would put the rate at about 29.5 per 1,000, just over the U.S. rate of 28% (Ventura et al 2004). Recent data indicate a downward turn in teenage abortions in Sweden, however, with 24.3 per 1,000 in 2005 (National Board of Health and Welfare 2006). Of significant interest is the birth rate among teenagers in the U.S., which is the highest in the developed world, seven times as high as Japan's (UN 2005).
Japan is an interesting comparator, since reports of Japanese religiosity rate them at 64-65% atheist/agnostic (Zuckerman 2005). However, it consistently reports the lowest rates of abortion and pregnancies among teens: 6.3 and 10.2 per 1,000 respectively.
Whenever attempting to find correlations between "moral" behavior and religion, or lack of either, the same thing consistently becomes clear: those nations that are among the most superstitious experience the highest rates of amoral behavior.
Does religion cause bad behavior? That's certainly debatable, but there certainly is *no* evidence to suggest that the United States is in any danger of becoming less religious -it has, indeed, become increasingly backward in its superstitious nature- nor is there evidence that lack of religion, should it occur in America, would be deleterious.
References
ARIS (2001).
American Religious Identification Survey.
The Graduate Center for the City University of New York
BFS (2005). Struktur der Bevölkerung. Ständige Wohnbevölkerung [Periode 1970-2005].
Bundesamt für Statistik BFS.
Beeghley, Leonard (2003).
Homicide: A Sociological Explanation. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.
Doyle, Rodger (2000) The Roots of Homicide.
Scientific American 283 (3), p. 22.
HRW (2006).
Info by Country: Africa.
Human Rights Watch [accessed 9/3/06]
National Board of Health and Welfare (2004). Abortions 2003.
Sweden: Centre for Epidemiology, Official Statistics of Sweden.
National Board of Health and Welfare (2006).
Abortions 2005.[PDF] Sweden: Centre for Epidemiology, Official Statistics of Sweden.
Pew (2002).
Among the Wealthy Nations... U.S. Stands Alone in its Embrace of Relgion. Pew Global Attitudes Project [accessed 9/3/06]
UN (2001).
The Seventh United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice Systems (1998 - 2000) [PDF]. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.
United Nations. (2005).
Demographic Yearbook, 2002. New York, NY: United Nations.
Ventura, Stephanie J., et al. (2004, June 15). "Estimated Pregnancy Rates for the United States, 1990-2000: An Update." National vital Statistics Report, 52(23).
Wolff, Michael; et al (1992).
Where We Stand. New York: Bantam Books.
Zuckerman, Phil (2005). "Atheism: contemporary rates and patterns," in
The Cambridge Companion to Atheism, Michael Martin, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.