- i want atheism to be a known option for people out there; i'm tired of seeing or learning about children who lead lives wrought with confusion and inconsolable depression because they feel homosexual urges but are told by their parents/any other pertinent religious figure in their life that it's an awful thing and that they'll go to hell for it.
Although I get what you mean, it really does sounds like you're implying that only religious people bash homosexuals (even though you said parents also) and that in order for individuals to be homosexual they should turn to atheism.
I agree but not quite using your argument. Parents should push you into doing positive things but they should also allow you choice. For instance, my parents "pushed" Christianity on me but as I got older they ultimately allowed me to choose for myself what I believe in (my mom at least). Sure they may have disliked my choice if I did choose another religion or none at all, but they allowed me to do so either way. Now if they would hound me about goin to hell, I doubt it because they respect me enough to make my own decisions and to deal with the consequences (whatever they may or may not be). With this in mind, not every parent is as understanding or loving apparently. I don't think solely promoting atheism should be the case, just promote knowledge, acceptance, and understanding and everything should/would be fine.
This is a flimsy argument. Simply because something has always been in x way doesn't mean that x way is correct. For thousands of years women had little-to-no rights depending on where you went, and even in the most liberal soceities women were significantly less free than men, but that doesn't mean that's a good social order. Arguing that the originators of the cause for women's rights simply didn't 'get' the social order then and were therefore to be ignored is a flimsy argument, and reeks strongly of ever stronger social conservatism.
Morality comes from human nature, not the reverse, and in many cases there is plain amorality in religion, with numerous examples found all over the world, especially in the treatment of women by men. Also, there's no way that you can argue that religion sprang up independently, for the same reason you can not argue that language developed independently. We simply do not have the ability to do any sort of research that far back. For example, you may think that Hinduism seems vastly different than any European religion, but the religion of the Greeks, Romans, Celts, and Nords all stem from the Proto-Indo-European religion. It's possible (and very likely) that this religion stems from an even further back religion, but all we can construct is the PIE (Yes, that is the acronym, laugh all you want) religion.
Small communities often allow for shared resources due to a closer equilibrium between people and the resources needed to keep them alive, allowed for spreading it around further. The fact that they also tend to be socially conservative, and therefore more likely to be religious, is probably unrelated to that fact. Also note that only a max of 4% of Israel's population is areligious, and possibly less than that, with most people being Jewish. The forms of Judaism in Israel are also much more conservative in the US, with the most popular kind of Judaism in the US commonly considered to not be a form of Judaism in Israel.
Nazi Germany actually spread propaganda about Positive Christianity, a form of Christianity that was consistent with Nazism, and it's also known that Hitler was raised Roman Catholic, though whether he considered himself a Christian is a matter of debate. Joseph Goebbels' diary says that he was deeply religious, but also strongly anti-Christianity.
Most issues related to religion stem from fundamentalism. It is fundamentalist Muslims that run most Arab states, with liberal Muslim states being very similiar to the west in regards to rights and civil liberties. It's fundamentalist Christians that have the slogans of 'God hates fags' and other such hatred, and even fundamentalist Buddhists will kill Christian missionaries in the Chinese countryside. Strong nationalism is essentially the same as strong fundamentalism, in that they believe their particular group is correct no matter what is flawed. The connection is simply ridiculous fanaticism.
Religion isn't inherently wrong, no more so than any other social construct, but it's one more thing that can a person can tie themselves to and allow them to cloud their reason.