Marxism has a lot of associations with atheism. Stalin's purges of religious believers in Georgia and Poland are the most obvious case that comes to mind, but the problem there is that if you're discussing atheism in terms a 'rationalist atheist' perspective (i.e. the modern day push for a logical deduction of reality) it largely fails because said purges were based around another dogmatic, largely faith-driven system: Communism. North Korea comes up in these arguments a lot too, but once again, it fails because it does not focus on the root case: a fanatical belief in something, which rational atheism (well at least people who understand what rational atheism is, as opposed to irrational atheism) rejects.Evilpigeon said:I'm genuinely interested, give me examples of atrocities done in the name of an absence of belief.omicron1 said:While atheism itself has some rather vicious purges to its name
Also don't let anyone tell you Hitler was an atheist, historians are still debating Hitler's religious attitudes. Mein Kampf has a lot of references to God in it, but I think that later actions by Hitler push him away from Catholicism towards a more deitist approach centred around Aryan mysticism (based on the documents I've read).
People also like to chalk up eugenics to atheism and science in general, the problem with that is that most fail to actually look at eugenics origins: support initially emerged from rural, religious populations who were used to concepts such as animal husbandry. Not only is eugenics more based on social alienation of the lunatic fringe then actual science, but many of its proponents were actually religious. Some excellent examples are the late 19th century eugenics movement that emerged in America from the progressive movement (which wasn't atheistic by a long shot) and the eugenics legislation in 20th century Alberta.