Nationalize churches? One agency promoting atheism

First, they asked us to respect religion. Then, they demanded tax exemptions. Eventually, they bought real estate, ran schools, and influenced governments. All along, they played victims. Meanwhile, they grew rich, powerful, and untouchable. So nationalize them.

For too long, churches have escaped scrutiny. They present themselves as moral institutions while hoarding obscene wealth. The Vatican, in particular, has transformed into a sovereign lobbying power, mingling with diplomats, influencing UN resolutions, and blocking global human rights. It no longer operates as a religious center—it acts like a multinational empire. And yet, the world pretends it is holy.

Therefore, it is time to break the illusion. While people suffer from poverty, ignorance, and superstition, religious institutions enjoy luxury, land, and political leverage. Instead of tolerating this imbalance, we must dismantle it. We must nationalize church assets, abolish their legal privileges, and redirect their fortune toward truth, science, and reason. If we want to build a rational world, we must first bankrupt the irrational one.

Atheism must become the state norm

Let us begin with schools. Whenever religion reaches a child before reason does, indoctrination wins. Consequently, no modern society should allow religious institutions to teach children. Religious schools, by their very nature, implant dogma before minds develop critical capacity. This is not education—it is programming.

Thus, we must introduce a single, unified, atheist curriculum in all state and private schools. Children must learn evolutionary biology, cosmology, logic, ethics without gods, and cognitive bias. Of course, religious belief can still be studied—but only at the university level, where theology sits beside mythology, literature, and psychology.

Moreover, this curriculum must aim not only to inform but to liberate. Children deserve the full picture. They deserve to know what the universe is, not what ancient men guessed, they deserve to ask questions, not memorize commandments. They deserve freedom of mind, not chains of doctrine.

Many defenders of faith will protest. They always do. They will scream about oppression, persecution, and human rights. But in reality, their objection exposes their weakness. Because if their beliefs could stand without early indoctrination, they would not fear competition. They fear reason precisely because reason wins.

Let believers be, but strip their power

Importantly, the proposal is not to punish individuals for personal beliefs. You may believe in gods, angels, demons, miracles, or spirits. You may pray, fast, or chant. However, you may not use these beliefs to extract money from others, control education, or influence politics.

Thus, we must leave the private realm intact. But at the same time, we must strip all public influence from organized religion. This means removing their tax privileges, cutting their media subsidies, ending their access to public schools, and shutting down all religious lobbying.

Religion must shrink back to what it falsely claims to be—a private matter. As long as it remains a political force, we must treat it as one. Not with deference, but with regulation. Not with respect, but with legal boundaries. Because a private belief may be sacred—but a public institution must be accountable.

The Vatican: A corrupt global actor

No institution better illustrates this corruption than the Vatican. On the surface, it drapes itself in humility and ritual. In practice, it operates like a state, a hedge fund, and a propaganda network. It signs concordats with nations, it runs banks. And it protects criminals. It blocks progressive reforms across continents.

For instance, the Vatican has interfered in laws on contraception, abortion, divorce, and sex education. It has used its influence to shield pedophile priests, silence survivors, and obstruct justice. Simultaneously, it hoards a vast empire of art, gold, and property—collected through centuries of spiritual extortion.

And yet, it dares to speak of morality.

Therefore, we must remove its mask. We must classify it not as a religion, but as a financial-political syndicate. And like every other syndicate, it must face investigation, taxation, and confiscation.

Nationalize them: Take their money: It belongs to humanity

Their fortune did not grow through fair exchange. It grew through fear, guilt, and manipulation. Poor peasants gave coins hoping for heaven. Dying mothers signed over property hoping to save their children’s souls. Colonized peoples were told to trade land for salvation. Throughout history, religion took and took and took—always in God’s name, never with consent.

Therefore, we must take it back.

Start with mandatory audits of every major religious institution. Open the books. Track the offshore accounts. Identify the shell companies. Then, seize what exceeds the threshold of ethical ownership. Reclaim the cathedrals, palaces, mansions, and bank accounts. Return it not to the state religion—there must be none—but to science, education, and health.

Moreover, this should not stop with the Vatican. Evangelical megachurches in the U.S., Wahhabi-linked mosques in the Gulf, temple syndicates in India, and Orthodox allies of Putin’s regime—all must face the same justice. If they operate like empires, we treat them like empires. If they exploit the masses, we confiscate their spoils.

Build a global atheist agency

What do we do with their stolen fortune? We build the future.

We establish one international agency—well-funded, unapologetic, and global. It would serve one mission: the global promotion of atheism. Its departments would include education, legal defense, psychological aid for ex-believers, media production, scientific outreach, and political advocacy.

This agency would operate in every country. It would publish books, train teachers, support secular activists, and confront religious lobbying. It would respond to blasphemy trials, harassment of freethinkers, and religious censorship. Whenever reason is under attack, it would strike back—legally, rhetorically, and ideologically.

With enough funding, it would eclipse every Vatican. With enough reach, it would finally give voice to the silenced.

Atheist missionaries: A force for deprogramming

While religious missionaries spread myths and fears, we must deploy atheist missionaries to spread facts and freedom. In regions flooded with religious propaganda, they would offer an alternative. Not with arrogance, but with precision. Not with contempt, but with strength.

In Africa, they would expose the lies of prosperity preachers. In Latin America, they would challenge Catholic dogma in schools. In Southeast Asia, they would offer science where spirits once reigned. In Europe and North America, they would confront the return of theocratic thinking under nationalist disguise.

These missionaries would not convert—they would educate. They would not shame—they would question. And wherever they went, they would leave behind not followers, but thinkers.

Control the media battlefield

Religion won the world not with sermons, but with stories. It captured the human mind with parables, songs, rituals, and fear. Therefore, we must do the same—without the fear.

We must create a media empire. Documentaries, films, animations, satire, podcasts, VR experiences, interactive curricula—every format must be used. And instead of recycling secular clichés, we must tell bold, emotional, intelligent stories. Stories that deconstruct holy myths; stories that inspire awe through science. Stories that humanize morality without divine judgment.

Furthermore, these productions must be mandatory in public education. Children must not just learn evolution—they must feel it. They must not just read about history—they must understand how religion distorted it. And once media becomes ours, the myth loses its grip.

Erase religious privilege: Completely

As long as religion keeps its special status, it will keep growing back. Thus, we must erase every single privilege.

No tax breaks, no zoning exemptions, no state funding, no religious symbols in public institutions. And no representation in parliaments. No faith-based legal exceptions. No exemptions for vaccines, discrimination, or labor law.

If religion wants to survive, it must do so like any other ideology—on its own money, with full transparency, and without favors.

This is not revenge. This is equality. What they called tradition was just corruption with a halo.

Nationalizes churches: Build ethics from reality, not revelation

People still ask: what replaces religion? The answer is simple. Reality does.

Human empathy, scientific understanding, and philosophical reasoning can create ethics stronger than any commandment. Not because a god demands it—but because suffering exists. Not because a book orders it—but because justice matters.

We must teach why cooperation works, why fairness evolved, why morality emerged from tribes—not Sinai. This requires funding, research, and courage. But once done, it becomes unbreakable.

Their time is over: Ours begins now

Religion had two thousand years. It ruled kings, enslaved continents, burned scientists, and sold guilt. Now, its time is over.

Let us not wait another century, let us not ask politely. Let us act.

We nationalize their wealth, we end their privileges, we shut down their schools. And we build our agency. We send our missionaries, we tell better stories. We teach real ethics.

Not with violence. But with strategy, law, and truth.

Because in the end, they fear one thing more than heresy—irrelevance. And we are here to make them irrelevant.


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