Something that’s has irked me for some time now is how many people latched onto the Atheist movement as an edgy teen but now look back on it in reverence and not shame. This seems to be a common theme in academia and is prevalent even in communities like this one. The lamentation of the “golden-age” of atheism is peak hubris. Dawkins, Hitchens, and crew were deconstructionists of the critical theory variety. Their lives were consumed by the need to disprove God and religion. However these were the shortsighted desires of pseudo-intellectuals, they accomplished nothing productive, and if anything, opened the door for the screaming children that replaced them. I don’t think Dawkins, in his wildest dreams, ever saw his fall come from his own hubris. The intellectual argument over dismantling religion somehow disproving the existence of a god is what fueled the SJWS and their own brand of hubris in the early 2000’s. BTW Dawkins, this is what happens when you remove the “tumor” of religion, you hack. As you see today, Dawkins was swallowed by the stupidity he helped bring about, the Maximilien Robespierre of the modern era, begging for trannies to not cut off his head.
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The "Bible-thumpers" were a group largely made of parents (most adults were parents back then) that saw the traditions that build a happy community and life for them and saw a subversive culture that was gunning to take that away. They did their best to enforce their culture but failed to safeguard against the anything goes attitude of the Boomers.
The lessons they tried to enforce through dictate are the lessons that Godless/fatherless men are "discovering" today (Clean your room, pull your weight, gatekeep your tribe or subversive elements will destroy it from the inside).
I'd say the problem of the "Bible-thumpers" is that they didn't go far enough in instilling those values. The message was right but their methodology wasn't prepared for what they were facing.