What sort of Atheist/Secularist are you?

Nobody has posted in this community yet, so I figured I'd take it upon myself to get the discussion going.

As we Atheists are won't to say, Atheism is not a religion. The only requirement for being an Atheist (in the modern sense of the word)+ is that you don't believe in the existence of any deities/divine beings. This leaves a massive range of possible options for atheists to identify with. From the so called new Atheists like Richard Dawkins and Daniel Denett, to great wheel Buddhists whose search for enlightenment through the release of desires doesn't require the belief in deities. When it comes to secularism, there might well be Theists, Deists, Pantheists and many other people who identify as secular, and who might want to introduce themselves in their own way.

As for myself, I identify as an agnostic atheist. I don't believe in any gods, but I don't claim to have any certain knowledge towards it either. (This latter bit mostly on the grounds of epistemic modesty. Any deities are superfluous to my world view, which is based on the scientific models that are widely held (and is in no small part influenced by having a lot of existentialism, along the lines of Sartre's work, playing a part in my upbringing), and thus can be removed from the equation as per Occam's Razor.) My main reason for identifying as an Atheist rather than an Agnostic is that even though I don't claim certain knowledge, I don't believe in the existence of deities. To qualify as an agnostic, in my eyes, one would have to suspend judgment on what they believe.

So I was curious: What sort of an atheist (or other form of secular person) you identify as?

+Atheism, as late as the 16th century at least, was also used to mean not believing in the specific deity and/or tenets of the mainstream faith of a society. As can be seen in part in the exile of Baruch de Spinoza from Rotterdam's Jewish community at the time. - Though you could argue that Spinoza's Pantheism is similar enough to Atheism. That's a discussion for another place and time however.