I'm perfectly prepared to believe such a correlation is possible due to non-supernatural mechanisms. However I have found no evidence to support your claim that there is a correlation. It's your claim to prove or disprove. I'm just trying to help you do so. Don't get sulky with me if the data I've located for you doesn't bear out a claim for which you have provided no other substantial evidence. The data I have used comes from the world Christian Database. They are your fellow Christians
It says that the USA is
0.5% Athiest, 0.3 % Baha'i, 0.9% Buddhist, 84.1% Christian, 0.4% Hindu, 1.9% Jewish, 1.6% Muslim, 9.3% non-religious, 0.1% Sikh and 0.1 % Spiritist leaving 0.8% either unaccounted for or the result of rounding errors.
The site has data on
Atheists
Bahais
Buddhists
Chinese Universists
Christians
Confucianists
Hindus
Jains
Jews
Muslims
Non-Religious
Shintoists
Sikhs
Spiritist
Taoists
Zoroastrians
I've explained in a previous post there are less people who positively identify themsleves as atheist than who are classified as non-religious. It appears that this data treats atheists as a separate group from the non-religious. I would have treated atheists as a subset but that's just my preference.
In that post I did ask which data you'd prefer me to use. So instread of just calling your fellow christians over at the World Christian Database, liars, you could have offered constructive criticism in answer to my question.
I could total the number of Athiests and the number of Non religious people in each country and plot that against suicide rate.
Here we go. (Data included within spoiler tags to aid the readability of this post.
Any correlation?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=10375&d=1205765004
No!
Or not knowing precisiely what you think the justification is for your claim, perhaps it's all non Chirstians who are more prone to suicide. I could subtract the number of Christians from 100% to give me the number of non christians in each country and plot that against suicide rate.
Here you go
Any correlation?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=10376&d=1205765380
No!
Or I suppose the Muslims and the Jews belive in the same God too. Lets add the number of Jews, Christians and Muslims together, subtract that total from 100 to give a percentage on Non-JudeoChristians for each country and plot that against suicide rate.
Here you go
Any correlation?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=10377&d=1205765608
No!
Or maybe it's not just the Abrahamic God that has this hypothesised effect. Perhaps I should group Baha'is, Christians, Jews, Muslims, Sikhs and Zoroastrians as theistic religions total those percentages and subtract that from 100 to get an indication of the number of non-thiests in each country. Then I could plot that against suicide rate.
Here you go
Any correlation?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=10378&d=1205765986
No!
You see DOC, if there was a strong correlation it would have been visible in the rough and ready figures I first used.
For the sake of completeness I accepted your criticism that those figures didn't include the least atheistic countries. It wasn't constructive criticism, you didn't offer better data I could use.
I therefore found off my own bat figures supplied by christians for the number of athests in 183 different countries. I used these. If there were a correlation between turning your back on God and suicide rate I should have expected to see it here.
Now you complain that 0.5% of the USA being Athiests is too low a figure for you to believe. You fail to acknowldge that the data source contains additional information on the Non-religious - a different entity from decided atheists, and also infomration on a variety of other religions, you fail to acknowldge my offer to include the non-religious in the numbers or to offer any constructive ways of treating the data.
I've tried a few different approaches, at the risk of data mining for a correlation. If there was any correlation I'd have expected to see something from one or more of these approaches.
If there were any indication theres was something there to see I'd have performed a regression analyses wieghted with population data and provide a statistical estimate of such correlation happening by chance alone.
As it is unless you can provide other data to help substantiate your claim I can't find any evidence that the suicide rate in Japan is anything to do with "turning their back on God"
In fact I'm not even clear on why you believe such a thing in the first place.