Around here they show IMAX in the Smithsonian Natural History Museum, and in the Smithsonian exhibit on Man, there is a constantly-paying 20 minute film showing how we evolved from a furry little mammal. This is presented as fact and science. I no longer let my kids watch it, having sat though it once and seen the agenda in play.
Your National Museum = Your tax dollars at work.
Download some of the debates at www.drdino.com It's all free for downloading but if you order physical hard copies it costs to make and ship the media - however you can copy them and hand them out with no copyright violation. He wants the message to get out.
He doesn't claim tax exemption either, because he wants no government telling him he can't speak the truth. My kids love it.
I especially like the debates with these college profs who continually contradict themselves. He said he had a debate at Berkeley and it was the most fun he'd ever have. No one there liked him.
And crude petroleum is dinosaur soup. Well, not really, but it is only recently that the whole cycle of organic materials has been mapped out, and while all the building blocks were in place when the earth cooled, how were the first proteins created? Recall that the major constituents of any primitive atmosphere were carbon dioxide, ammonia, methane and water as vapor and liquid. By combination, and by repeated pressure and heat, there are various compounds formed by these scattered and random molecules, primarily ammonium carbonate, composed of a molecule of water, a molecule of carbon dioxide, and two molecules of ammonia, forming a white solid, that under heat and pressure, proceeds to form another solid of stable nature called urea, a precursor of most proteins. With the presence of methane and additional water, the first of a series of free protein molecules, better known as amino acids, which have an odd chemical property of being both acidic and basic, begin to link up end to end to form more and more complex proteins. But at what point, does this collection of proteins become self-replicating and take on the first characteristic of life? Something about this has to be WAY more than just random.