You miss the point. There are
more Catholics in prison than would be accounted for just by their numbers in the general population. An individual Catholic, on average, is actually more likely to be in prison than a randomly chosen citizen.
The ‘no true scotsman’ defense. Doesn’t change the fundamental statistic.
As you say, individual atheists will be different because there is no essential point connecting them other than lack of belief in God.
The short answer is: none of your business. The evidence shows that they
do have morals, so your insinuation that they do not is refuted, please stop saying it.
The longer version really needs a thread to itself, but in short:
The ‘true scotsman’ version of an atheist (i.e. one who agrees with me in everything) would get his morals from the laws of logic, the concept of benefit and harm, and the golden rule. Given that, you can derive a pretty complete moral code - pick up a book on ‘moral philosophy’ or ‘social philosophy’ to see how in detail.
The point about such a morality is that it is
secular, not Atheist with a capital ‘A’. Everyone should be able to agree at least in principal on that code, even if private religious views then cause you amend parts of it. (e.g.
a priori eating shellfish is not immoral, by the secular framework, but your holy book may say otherwise)
Contrast that with morality based on God,
solely on God with no acceptance of the secular framework. What can a christian then say to dissuade a muslim suicide bomber ? Quoting the catechism won’t work, as he doesn’t value it.
Only shared (i.e.
secular) moral framework allows for dialogue.
No idea. Who and what are you (apparently) quoting here?