29% of Americans say religion ‘out of date’
‘A Gallup poll of Americans’ attitudes towards religion released on Christmas Eve found significant recent increases in those responding either that they have no religious preference, that religion is not very important in their lives, or that they believe religion “is largely old-fashioned or out of date.”
‘Most of these changes have occurred since 2000 and represent the first significant shift since a sharp decline in religious adherence during the 1970s. Over the last nine years, the number with no religious preference has grown from a level of around 8% to 13%. The number for whom religion is not very important has climbed from just over 10% to 19%. And the number who believe religion is out of date and has no answers for today’s problems has jumped from slightly more than 20% to 29%.
‘The biggest difference is that in the late 1990s, up to 68% of Americans though religion had answers to the world’s problems — even though only about 60% said religion was personally very important to them. It seems as though over the last ten years a significant number may have gone from believing that religion is a positive factor in the world, even if they’re not particularly religious themselves, to seeing religion in a far more skeptical or even negative light.

Before there was law, there was religion.
Before there was religion, their was morality (teh).
Before this, there was the origin, Tao.
With law, you fear punishment from man.
With religion, you fear punishment from god.
With morality, you fear punishment from yourself, your consciousness.
Beyond this is the natural way. Tao.
There is a big difference between being afraid of legal consequence, to being afraid of the consequence of some god, to letting your own inner morality down. Sadly, inner morality has been usurped by religion and law.
LaoTze
He who speaks does not know, he who knows does not speak.