Ronald A. Lindsay

These articles, like his book, focus on topics in bioethics, including the morality of assisted suicide and human enhancement technology.

These articles include a vigorous defense of equal rights for LGBT individuals, and a discussion of the foundation for a nonreligious ethics.

Kurtz also challenged the chaplains’ refusal to allow him to open a Senate or a House session as a “guest” who would deliver solemn, nonreligious remarks.

[16] In March, 2011, the Center for Inquiry launched an advertising campaign in various cities, with billboards and subway ads proclaiming "You don't need God–to hope, to care, to love, to live."

[19] Along with the leaders of other secular organizations, Lindsay spoke at the Reason Rally, held on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. on March 24, 2012.

[20] In 2014, the Center for Inquiry launched a web-based campaign to “Keep Health Care Safe and Secular,”[21] focusing on reproductive rights, the dangers in alternative medicine, and the importance of vaccination.

[23] Lindsay and Center for Inquiry founder Paul Kurtz had disagreements over the operation of the organization which drew the attention of The New York Times.

Ron Lindsay at Reason Rally in March 2012
Ronald Lindsay "Why Skepticism?" at CSICon Las Vegas in 2016