It is open season on religion. God-bashing science fundamentalist Richard Dawkins (above) is frothing at the mouth again about the hordes of dangerous self-deluding religio-freaks rampaging round the world denying evolutionary theory and proclaiming creationism from the rooftops.
Porcine Martin Samuel, sports reporter-cum-heavyweight 'thinkpiece' columnist for the Times, today pretty much equated Catholicism with Nazism in an outrageously specious column supposedly about faith schools.
And as for the poor old Muslims, they could be forgiven for recalling the old adage: just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you. Because a tiny minority of fundamentalist Muslim women choose to wear the face-covering niqab the entire religion is consequently excoriated as an intolerant, illiberal, belligerent, medieval and barbaric threat to democracy. Race crimes increase. Stupid talk of a 'clash of civilisations' dins in our ears once more.
Normally I ignore Dawkins' bulging-eyed rhetoric as the rantings of a very intelligent idiot with so poor an understanding of religious faith and experience as to make his arguments risible. But a cold shiver went down my spine today when the implications of his logic hit home.
Religious belief, he argues, is a dangerous self-delusion, inimical to rationality and freedom of thought. Believers are to all intents and purposes, mad. You don't have to extrapolate this argument too far to come to some pretty chilling conclusions. For what do societies tend to do with mad, dangerous people? Lock them up, of course. We are only a few steps away from totalitarianism here. Lurking beneath Dawkins' polemic is a rather nasty intolerance of heterodoxy.
The undoubted and worrying rise of religious fundamentalism around the world is breeding the rise of an equally intolerant and dangerous secular fundamentalism. Each brand has its slavish adherence to sacred texts and its firebrand apologists. Each brand is convinced it is the sole purveyor of the truth.
So, for the record, let me speak up for the moderate, tolerant, entirely rational middle ground of believers - those often cowed into silence by the bombastic, the opinionated and the prejudiced.
Many people of faith happily accommodate evolutionary theory into their belief systems and entirely reject the notion that science is necessarily antipathetic to religion.
Many people of faith believe wholeheartedly in freedom of speech and freedom of thought, for without it their faith is not truly voluntary and less worthy as a result.
Many people of faith accept that their own religion is not the repository of all truth and not an exclusive pathway to God, accepting that non-believers are as equally capable of goodness, kindness and compassion as believers.
Many people of faith despair when fundamentalists hijack their religion for political ends, deliberately misinterpreting texts to justify acts of brutality, intolerance and repression. And many people of faith unequivocally reject the notion that they have a duty or a right to impose their beliefs on others.
But do you hear from these mealy-mouthed moderates in the media? Rarely. They do not make good copy. They are not controversial. They do not cause outrage or offence. They do not sell papers or increase ratings.
But unless this silent - silenced - majority has the timerity to speak up against the fundamentalists on both sides - to challenge prejudices, to correct misunderstandings - we will leave the battlefield wide open to those zealous factions.
Then liberalism, respect, tolerance, freedom of speech could all get caught in the crossfire - collateral damage in a fundamentalist war most of us do not want.
If only we would say so.
