Tracts

atheism tract atheist tract

Religious tracts can be found everywhere. The most famous distributor of these is Chick Publications. They print cartoon tracts that are so far-fetched they are comical. Churches and individuals pay up to 15 cents a piece for them. When you see religious tracts around your town, take them all. Make the religious organization that put them there waste as much money as possible. If you find them at a commercial establishment, complain to the owner that you'd rather not be prostletized while you shop.

It's not hard to get churches to send you tracts in the mail. Just search the 'net for a church in your town and send an email requesting literature along with your mailing address. When you receive them, throw them in the trash. Freethought tracts date back to the 19th century. Richard Carlile, a freethinking deist, was born in Ashburton, Devon, England. Carlile was prosecuted for blasphemy and seditious libel in 1819 by the Society for the Suppression of Vice. He spent 1819-1825 at Dorcester prison, where he published freethought tracts with wide circulation and influence, including reprints of freethinkers such as Voltaire, Shelley, Byron and Bentham.

There are 13 freethought tracts available from FFRF at $4 per dozen and they offer a sample pack for $4. Your best buddy, Normal Bob Smith, has 9 different colorful tracts available for free download. You can leave them in:

The information on this site is based in part on the author's non-professional understanding of U.S. laws concerning separation of church and state and other matters.
Nothing on this website is intended, nor should it be construed, as legal advice.