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England players celebrate after the FIFA Under-17 World Cup.
England players celebrate after the FIFA Under-17 World Cup 2017 final between England and Spain. The same day Chelsea fielded a side without a single English player. Photograph: Piyal Adhikary/EPA
England players celebrate after the FIFA Under-17 World Cup 2017 final between England and Spain. The same day Chelsea fielded a side without a single English player. Photograph: Piyal Adhikary/EPA

John Humphrys’ declining faith in Thought for the Day

This article is more than 6 years old
Thought for the Day | Lewis Hamilton | England’s Under-17 World Cup victory | Boleyn Bitter and Iron Ale | French butter shortage | The Guardian Reader

Three cheers for John Humphrys (Thought for the Day is ‘boring’, 31 October). The continued exclusion of secular humanists from the programme is inexcusable, now that half the UK population do not have a religious faith. The BBC should either allow people of no faith to speak, or retitle it truthfully “Religious Thought for the Day”.
Mary McKeown
Bedford

John Humphrys complains that Thought for the Day is “nearly three minutes of uninterrupted religion”. Is it the uninterrupted or the religion that he is most worried about?
Jeanne Warren
Oxford

Formula 1 world champion he may be for a record fourth time (Arise Sir Lewis?, Sport, 31 October), but where does Lewis Hamilton pay his taxes? Maybe there should be no elevation without taxation.
Graham Downie
Studley, Warwickshire

On the day that the England under-17 side won their football World Cup (Young Lions roar to victory, 30 October), Chelsea, last season’s top club, fielded a side versus Bournemouth without one English player. Chelsea have an Italian manager and a Russian owner. This is the reality of profesional football in this country.
David Watson
Nutley, East Sussex

Will Hawkes’ report on craft beer at football grounds (G2, 30 October) failed to mention those on offer at West Ham United: Boleyn Bitter and Iron Ale are on sale at nine bars on the Podium Level at the London Stadium.
Roger Protz
St Albans, Hertfordshire

And, as the French say of margarine (Letters, 28 October), “C’est magnifique, mais ce n’est pas le beurre.”
Jane Caplan
Oxford

Siobhain Butterworth writes of her time as Guardian readers’ editor (Open door, 30 October) that the “archetypal Guardian reader seemed to be disappearing”. On the contrary, I’m still here as usual.
Keith Flett
London

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