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Loosening Darwin's Grip
Citizen Magazine ^ | March 2003 | Clem Boyd

Posted on 03/04/2003 7:27:34 PM PST by Remedy

Federal legislation has given Christians nationwide a boost in their battle to allow evidence against Charles Darwin's controversial theory into public school classrooms.

Larry Taylor had run his volunteers through public-speaking drills, and now he was seeing the fruit of his labor.

Parents favoring a new science education policy in Cobb County, Ga., a policy that would allow evidence against evolution into classrooms long dominated by Darwin’s flawed theory, were gaining the upper hand at the county’s September board meeting. The parents were offering coherent and compelling arguments, each of them concluding their remarks within the board-imposed time limit. The other side wasn’t nearly as impressive.

"The opposition was disorganized," Taylor recalled. "They kept making the same baseless charges and never got much beyond introducing themselves before their time was up."

The Cobb board must have noted the difference, because it voted unanimously for "teaching the controversy" — permitting teachers to discuss with their students the growing number of studies and reports contradicting evolutionary theory.

The media misreported what Cobb County board members had voted to do, though, claiming the school board had mandated creationism. No matter. The idea of allowing greater freedom in science education, encouraged by language attached to President Bush’s 2002 education act, is emboldening parents and school board members across the nation.

"It is time for defenders of Darwin to engage in serious dialogue and debate with their scientific critics," said Jed Macosko, a research molecular biologist at the University of California, Berkeley. "Science can’t grow where institutional gatekeepers try to prevent new challengers from being heard."

The List Keeps Growing

The seeds for the Cobb County success were sown in September 2001, when the Seattle-based Discovery Institute compiled a list of 100 U.S. scientists who said they were skeptical that the cornerstones of evolution — random mutation and natural selection — could account for the complexity of life. The list included professors and researchers at Princeton, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Pennsylvania, Yale and the National Laboratories at Livermore, Calif., and Los Alamos, N.M.

Chemist Henry "Fritz" Schaefer of the University of Georgia, a five-time Nobel nominee, commented, "Some defenders of Darwinism embrace standards of evidence for evolution that as scientists they would never accept in other circumstances."

In 2001, the voices of dissent finally caught the attention of congressional leaders.

When the U.S. Senate considered Bush’s education reform bill, the No Child Left Behind Act, Rick Santorum, R-Pa., offered a nonbinding "sense of the Senate" amendment spelling out how science teachers should approach the subject of the origin and diversity of life.

The amendment read in part: "A quality science education should prepare students to distinguish the data and testable theories of science from religious or philosophical claims that are made in the name of science. Where topics are taught that may generate controversy(such as biological evolution), the curriculum should help students to understand the full range of scientific views, why such topics may generate controversy, and how scientific discoveries can profoundly affect society."

In other words, science classes should be free to teach the controversies surrounding the evidence for evolution.

The paragraph was not included in the final bill but inserted instead in the conference report accompanying the legislation. Conference reports offer a guide to understanding Congress’ intent in passing specific legislation.

"A number of scholars are now raising scientific challenges to the usual Darwinian account of the origins of life," Santorum said after the bill passed. "Thus, it is entirely appropriate that the scientific evidence behind them is examined in science classrooms. Efforts to shut down scientific debates, as such, only serve to thwart the true purposes of education, science and law."

Santorum’s paragraph gave further impetus to an ever-expanding movement.

Ohio Firestorm

In June 2001, a team of 41 teachers and scientists began writing standards to serve as the basis for science education curriculum throughout Ohio. These would become the foundation for new state-mandated achievement tests kids would have to pass to graduate high school. There was a lot on the line.

Bob Lattimer, a research chemist from Hudson, Ohio, and a member of the science writing team, noticed the proposed instruction on biological origins would require students to learn Darwin’s theory but not the debate surrounding it. He offered changes to the policy that would allow teaching alternative explanations only to have them repeatedly rejected.

Then, on Jan. 11, 2002, just a few days after the education reform act became federal law, the Ohio school board’s standards committee heard from John Calvert, managing director of the Kansas-based Intelligent Design Network. Calvert explained that the state’s science standards shut out competing theories about the origin of life and censored legitimate criticism.

That presentation spurred a debate drawing more than 1,500 spectators. Among the speakers was Brown University biologist Kenneth R. Miller, who searched his laptop’s hard drive for the text of the education bill and projected it onto a screen. He argued that Santorum’s paragraph is not law, and therefore irrelevant to Ohio science standards.

On his Web site, Miller blasted the intelligent design camp for misleading the public: "The fact that the anti-evolutionists eagerly misrepresent both the content of the education bill and the language in the new education act is at once distressing and instructive."

The Discovery Institute was quick to correct Miller’s assertions.

"While the Santorum statement may not have the ‘force of law,’ it is a powerful statement of federal education policy, and it provides authoritative guidance on how the statutory provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act are to be carried out," a Web site news release noted.

The board also heard from two Ohio congressmen — Republicans John Boehner and Steve Chabot. Their March 15 letter to the state board said, "The Santorum language clarifies that public school students are entitled to learn that there are differing scientific views on issues such as biological evolution."

Meanwhile, most of the public feedback sided with the Discovery Institute. A poll released in May 2002 by Zogby International found that nearly eight out of every 10 Ohioans supported the teaching of intelligent design in classrooms where Darwinian evolution also is taught. A survey by The Plain Dealer newspaper in Cleveland offered similar findings: 74 percent of Ohioans said evidence for and against evolution should be taught in science classrooms, while 59 percent said intelligent design should be included in origins study.

Altogether, 20,000 people contacted the state board, urging it to allow classrooms to "teach the controversy."

That swayed the state board, which voted in December to adopt a teach-the-controversy policy.

"The Santorum language gave impetus to the board that if they did move in this direction they would have support from federal legislators," said spokesperson Jody Sjogream of Science Excellence for All Ohioans.

Board member Debbie Owen Fink agreed.

"The Santorum language strengthened the case for Ohio to be bold in dealing with controversial areas of the curriculum, in a very up front and fair manner. Santorum helped us frame the issue."

Cobb Controversy

Meanwhile, another school board was warring over the origin of life.

The Cobb County debate began quietly in 2001, when attorney and parent Marjorie Rogers of Marietta learned the school district was preparing to adopt new science textbooks. When she reviewed the proposed textbooks at a public meeting in early 2002, Rogers noticed they presented evolution as a fact, not a theory. She rallied her neighbors and friends and circulated a petition urging the school board to use disclaimer language similar to what’s used in Alabama:

"This textbook contains material on evolution. Evolution is a theory, not a fact, regarding the origin of living things. This material should be approached with an open mind, studied carefully, and critically considered."

The board voted to apply disclaimer stickers to the books. But pro-family groups, such as the local chapters of the American Family Association (AFA), Concerned Women for America and the Christian Coalition, wanted more — a new policy for science education.

"The proposal of the Cobb School Board is to approach [evolution] objectively without bias or intellectual prejudice," wrote Steve Shasteen, executive director of AFA’s North Georgia chapter, in a news release. "Objectivity does not censor evidence because of its religious or nonreligious implications. It simply calls for critical thinking and open mindedness that will allow objective consideration of the full range of scientific views about our origin. We are not asking to teach a theology class in the public schools but to allow critical thinking."

Larry Taylor, a construction manager and father of three schoolchildren, organized Parents for Truth in Cobb (PTC) to support the proposed policy. He put together a list of talking points for the Cobb County board’s September meeting, covering everything from gaps in the fossil record to the list of prestigious scientists questioning macroevolution. A group of 20 to 30 parents divvied up the topics, put together one-minute presentations and critiqued each others’ speeches.

Taylor even played reporter.

"I asked them some of the trick questions I’d been hit with," he told Citizen. "Some handled it well, others got angry and defensive. But it gave us a chance to work through that and know what to expect."

When the meeting rolled around, the PTC and its supporters, about 80 in all, showed up in force on a rainy day, wearing buttons that said, "Evolution: A Leap of Faith." They crowded into the lobby of the board offices, shoulder to shoulder with pro-evolutionists, engaging in mini-debates as they waited to speak.

"I had one man come up to me and say my button was offensive to him," Taylor said. "He was wearing a black T-shirt with the Christian fish on it, but with feet coming out the bottom and ‘Darwin’ written inside. I told him his shirt was a desecration of a holy religious symbol. He didn’t have any comment."

About 20 PTC members spoke. "We kept bringing it back to the central message — this is not a religious issue, but an academic freedom issue," Taylor said.

PTC member Preston Hobby spoke at the meeting and was shocked by the opposition. "They didn’t say anything more than, ‘This is what we’ve always taught; this is accepted science; they only want to put God in the classroom,’ " he said. "We won the day."

The board adopted a new policy that did not address creationism or intelligent design but encouraged "objective" classroom discussion of origin.

Board member Gordon O’Neill said the policy is a step in the right direction.

"If an origin theory is written in a book, whether it’s a Bible or a science book, critical thinkers need to review it from different angles," he said. "This issue is steeped in principles of free speech, freedom of religion and free thought. Political correctness pushes freedom of thought out of the classroom."

O’Neill added that Santorum’s paragraph gave the board extra confidence. "The senator’s language sent the message we’d be within the boundaries of the Constitution and the laws of the United States with this policy," he said. "It increased our comfort level."

The Big Mo

The Discovery Institute said it is getting calls from across the country from state legislators and school board members who want to follow Cobb County’s lead. Calvert of the Intelligent Design Network said the next battlefront likely will be New Mexico, where state standards will be developed this year. Calvert already has set up a branch operation there in anticipation.

Mark Hartwig, Ph.D., the religion and society analyst for Focus on the Family, expects teaching-the-controversy policies to spread. And Focus on the Family, as it did in Ohio, is prepared to assist those willing to take the lead.

"In March and April, we sent out a letter to 128,000 constituents in Ohio letting them know what was happening," Hartwig said. "We encouraged people to contact the state board of education."

Hartwig expects the movement will ultimately have a life of its own.

"Cobb and Ohio gave it a lot of momentum," he said. "This isn’t some kind of fringe idea, promoted by fanatics, but a view supported by the public."

Lattimer, the Ohio science team member, said the victory in his state was a "cooperative venture."

"The unprecedented response could not have happened without many people getting on board — and we believe that the real credit goes to God."

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Clem Boyd is a freelance writer in Ohio.

This article appeared in the March 2003 issue of Citizen magazine. Copyright © 2003 Focus on the Family. All rights reserved. International copyright secured.


Religion in disguise?

To hear the mainstream media tell it, "intelligent design" and "creationism" are the same thing. Scientifically speaking, though, their main tenets are vastly different:

Creation science is defined by the following six tenets, taken together:

• The universe, energy and life were created from nothing.

• Mutations and natural selection cannot bring about the development of all living things from a single organism.

• The Earth is young — in the range of 10,000 years or so.

• "Created kinds" of plants and organisms can vary only within fixed limits.

• Humans and apes have different ancestries.

• Earth’s geology can be explained by catastrophic events, primarily a worldwide flood.

Intelligent design, on the other hand, involves only two basic assumptions:

Intelligent causes exist for the creation of life.

• These causes can be empirically detected.

What they did right

What did the parents in Cobb County, Ga., say about teaching the controversy surrounding Darwinism that proved so persuasive? Larry Taylor, head of Parents for Truth in Cobb, put together a list of topics that became the basis for parents’ testimony at a crucial public meeting last year:

Parents want objective instruction: This is not an effort to get religion in the classroom, but to make sure all information for and against evolutionary theory is presented so students can decide.

Irreducible complexity: Darwin wrote if any complex organ existed which could not have been formed by numerous, slight modifications, his theory would break down. Biochemist Michael Behe contends the basic cell meets this criterion.

The No Child Left Behind Act: The Santorum conference report language advises schools that origins science should expose students to "the full range of scientific views that exists." Icons of evolution: Various "proofs" of Darwinian macroevolution, many treated as fact in the Cobb County seventh-grade science textbook, have been shown to be false.

Scientists who doubt Darwinism: A list of 160 Georgia scientists who question Darwin’s theory was presented, proving "this is not a debate between science and religion; it’s a debate between science and science."

The Zogby poll: A nationwide poll in 2002 found that 71 percent of Americans want biology teachers to teach Darwin’s theory but also to include the evidence against it. From the same poll, 78 percent said that where Darwin’s theory is taught, evidence for an intelligent designer should also be allowed.

Missing links: According to science experts, there are significant holes in the fossil record, indicating a lack of evidence for transitions between species, a major Darwinian tenet.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: creation; crevolist; evilution; evolution; intelligentdesign
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To: Dataman
I made an exception to my don't-do-links rule and took a look. I read it twice just to be sure of my response. I saw an outline with theoretics but there was no credible or supported explanation for why we get old.

You're not asking for information but for proof. You could give a crap about actually learning anything.

181 posted on 03/07/2003 12:43:28 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: VadeRetro
You could give a crap about actually learning anything.

There is a general rule of learning that goes like this:

Don't change your opinion unless there is good reason to change.

Your link didn't give a good reason. The word for people who believe something just because there is a link to it is "gullible."

This may help your attitute: eliminate

182 posted on 03/07/2003 12:48:24 PM PST by Dataman
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To: VadeRetro
You could give a crap about actually learning anything.

Don't sugarcoat it, Vade!

183 posted on 03/07/2003 12:48:45 PM PST by balrog666 (When in doubt, tell the truth. - Mark Twain)
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To: Dataman
there was no credible or supported explanation for why we get old.

Assume for a moment that it is possible to design a living thing that is infinitely self-reparing and does not get old. Can you give me a plausible reason why a designer would deliberately create so much suffering?

184 posted on 03/07/2003 12:53:29 PM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
Ignorant 2 year old question as usual !

Evolution is anti maturity ... narcissists!

Main Entry: ego·cen·tric
Pronunciation: "E-gO-'sen-trik also "e-
Function: adjective
Date: 1894
1 : concerned with the individual rather than society
2 : taking the ego as the starting point in philosophy
3 a : limited in outlook or concern to one's own activities or needs b : SELF-CENTERED, SELFISH
- egocentric noun
- ego·cen·tri·cal·ly /-tri-k(&-)lE/ adverb
- ego·cen·tric·i·ty /-"sen-'tri-s&-tE/ noun
- ego·cen·trism /-'sen-"tri-z&m/ noun
185 posted on 03/07/2003 1:32:24 PM PST by f.Christian (( + God =Truth + love courage // LIBERTY logic + SANITY + Awakening + ))
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To: Dataman
AS js1138 pointed out so well, we only need to live long enough to reproduce. REPRODUCTION is all that counts in evolution. There is no other measure of "superiority". Sure it would be dandy if we could live 500 years, but it doesn't take us that long to propogate our genes. Mayflys live only a day, but they reproduce like mad, hence they are an evolution success story.
186 posted on 03/07/2003 1:41:48 PM PST by gomaaa
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To: Dataman
Don't change your opinion unless there is good reason to change. Your link didn't give a good reason.

I don't know why I expected you to notice that it made sense. Then again, there must be lots of ways to misunderstand it so that it doesn't.

187 posted on 03/07/2003 2:22:48 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: gomaaa
REPRODUCTION is all that counts in evolution.

Then why don't we reproduce like dogs? Like flies? Why doesn't the female have more eggs? If we didn't get old, we could reproduce more. IOW, the higher animals should be better at reproduction and the lower should be less efficient. If all that is necessary is to pass on the genes, why do we live beyond 20?

Here's another puzzle for youse:

The Egyptians held that the ideal age was 120. That was over 3500 years ago.

188 posted on 03/07/2003 2:25:28 PM PST by Dataman
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To: Dataman
Then why don't we reproduce like dogs?

Maybe it's just me but I like to see breasts and stuff.

Like flies?

Not really.

Why doesn't the female have more eggs?

She has all the eggs.

If we didn't get old, we could reproduce more.

We could do everything more.

IOW, the higher animals should be better at reproduction and the lower should be less efficient. If all that is necessary is to pass on the genes, why do we live beyond 20?

If we didn't get old, we could reproduce more.

Here's another puzzle for youse:

Is it "Stump the Dummies" time? What do you prove with this if you ever do stump somebody?

The Egyptians held that the ideal age was 120. That was over 3500 years ago.

The maximum human longevity was has changed very little (until perhaps just recently). The average longevity has changed quite a bit over the same interval.

189 posted on 03/07/2003 2:45:31 PM PST by VadeRetro (That, and 120 years still sounds pretty good.l)
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To: Dataman
Then why don't we reproduce like dogs?

You really don't get the concept of selection, do you?

190 posted on 03/07/2003 2:50:34 PM PST by js1138
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To: VadeRetro
... was has changed ...

Grrrrr!

191 posted on 03/07/2003 2:53:04 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: VadeRetro
Maybe it's just me but I like to see breasts and stuff.

A true evolutionist.

192 posted on 03/07/2003 5:07:48 PM PST by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas)
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To: PatrickHenry
The Moral Majority is coming to seize my computer.
193 posted on 03/07/2003 5:43:10 PM PST by VadeRetro (I can play "Twist and Shout" too!)
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To: VadeRetro; PatrickHenry
Have you ever noticed that insect is an anagram for incest? This discussion is devolving.
194 posted on 03/07/2003 5:50:49 PM PST by js1138
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To: Ichneumon
Schaefer is entitled to his opinion, of course, but since you don't give any hint of his alleged reasons for saying so, nor any examples of the alleged "different standards", you're just insisting that we take his word for it because, by gosh, he's a smart guy and thus he couldn't be wrong.

The evolutionists have been looking for 150 years for evidence proving evolution and when asked for such proof they either:
1. insult.
2. say that science can never prove anything.
3. put up a pile of meaningless bones which mean nothing at all.

When asked for even the definition of evolution (if it is true and it is science then it must follow that the facts must fit the theory) they refuse to do so, give 20 different answers or completely eviscerate the definition so that it is totally meaningless.

When asked to show what scientific advances have happened due to evolutionary theory they can name none.

When asked for how evolution has benefitted mankind they can name nothing.

When asked how evolution achieves the transformation of one species into another, they cannot say how it happens.

When asked about evidence of such transformations, evolutionists cannot give any.

When asked for anything, they just ignore it.

The reason for all the above is that evolution is not science. It is pseudo-science for morons who are easily satisfied like all morons by a few cant phrases to use for things they cannot vaguely understand.

195 posted on 03/07/2003 7:34:46 PM PST by gore3000
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To: js1138
This discussion is devolving.

Now it's really gone to the dogs.

196 posted on 03/07/2003 7:41:41 PM PST by VadeRetro
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To: VadeRetro
Keep this blue barf bag handy:


197 posted on 03/08/2003 3:48:20 AM PST by PatrickHenry (Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas)
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To: Dataman
We don't reproduce at the same rate as other species because it takes longer to make a human embryo than, say, a mouse. By the same token the gestation period for a horse is 330 days while an elephant takes over a year. Flies reproduce faster because it's faster to make a small creature. So why is the world not populated entirely by mayflys if they're so good at reproducing? Because we are not in direct competition with them. Beetles are not likely to force us into extinction, nor are we likely to do the same thing to them. We don't compete for resources. We are plenty efficient at reproducing in our own way. Bugs are good at reproducing in theirs. If it ever came down to it and we somehow had to compete with insects for food to the point where the survival of our respective speices was at stake, we'd have problems.

The whole concept of "higher" vs. "lower" animals is meaningless. In competition for resources, the only thing that counts is reproduction. If there is some kind of competition between higher and lower, we would probably get our asses kicked.

As to our life span, it wasn't too long ago that we really didn't live much beyond 20, no matter what the ancient Egyptians would have liked.
198 posted on 03/08/2003 10:19:36 AM PST by gomaaa
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To: Chani

ping


199 posted on 11/19/2004 8:17:48 PM PST by Chani
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