Early in the revolution, atheistic propaganda was pushed in an attempt to obliterate religion.
The press and special conferences complained about the insufficiency of atheistic propaganda.
Since religion was the ideological tool that kept the system in place, Lenin believed atheistic propaganda to be of critical necessity.
Anti-religious and atheistic propaganda was implemented into every portion of soviet life: in schools, communist organizations such as the Young Pioneer Organization, and the media.
They also objected to the government's systematic atheistic propaganda and its silencing of the church's radio station in 1976.
Various groups alleged that this book was atheistic anti-religious propaganda by ruling Left Front government.
The constitution banned the proselytization of religious groups, allowed people to practice their existing religious rites, and promoted the spread of atheistic propaganda.
The church was used abroad to support Romania's image, while at the same time within the country the people would face continual atheistic propaganda.
Toward that end, the Communist regime confiscated church property, ridiculed religion, harassed believers, and propagated anti-religious atheistic propaganda in the schools.
In Soviet Russia, it was a norm enforced by persecution, education and all-encopassing atheistic propaganda.