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Tom, The Dancing Bug
MSNBC ^ | 2 July 2005 | Ruben Bolling

Posted on 07/05/2005 7:07:57 PM PDT by balrog666




TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: adhominem; churchofdarwin; creationism; crevolist; darwin; evolution; fundamentalism; gratuituousabuse; liberalism; news; religion
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To: RadioAstronomer

Genesis 1:27 - period. End of discussion, right?


101 posted on 07/06/2005 8:28:04 AM PDT by swampfox98 (Michael Reagan: "It's time to stop the flood.")
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To: PatrickHenry

Primal placemarker


102 posted on 07/06/2005 8:40:38 AM PDT by longshadow
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To: swampfox98
Genesis 1:27 - period. End of discussion, right?

Well... Not quite. :-)

Genesis 1:27 - So God created man in his [own] image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created he them.

Are you positive that it was not the image of perception (i.e. how we perceive this universe with wonder etc)? Or possibly evolution is God's image? Just two of many interpretations I can come up with.

Biblical interpretation is murkier than some may think.

103 posted on 07/06/2005 8:42:39 AM PDT by RadioAstronomer (Senior member of Darwin Central)
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To: balrog666

"Creationist Patrol Man" looks like Al "creationism should be taught in schools" Gore. Coincidence?


104 posted on 07/06/2005 8:47:52 AM PDT by RightWingAtheist (Creationism is not conservative!)
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To: Ichneumon

Mega-kudos. An awesome post.


105 posted on 07/06/2005 8:53:03 AM PDT by Lurking Libertarian (Non sub homine, sed sub Deo et lege)
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To: Junior; PatrickHenry
I was nearly there myself, but since the Almighty chats with me on a regular basis I figure this might be a bad move.
Creationism is Satan's greatest ploy to discredit Christianity.
Junior, I respect you for your faith. And I also think that it is people of faith, like you, who have to be the vanguard in this fight. The bull-headed creationist types can imperil both science and faith. And someone like you can attend to both.

Creationism is not only discrediting Christianity, but discrediting conservatism as well, as the great FReeper PatrickHenry has repeatedly noted.

106 posted on 07/06/2005 8:53:36 AM PDT by WildHorseCrash
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To: Ichneumon
...and what was wrong with the "Odin" cartoon posted by another Freeper? It was removed too. Sheesh.

That cartoon has been posted here many times before, and there's nothing incendiary about it, so the only reason I can think of is that the webmaster of the original site complained to the mods, either about copyright violations or the "stealing" of bandwidth (it's a pretty data-heavy graphic; takes a long time to download on dial-up).

I've had some cartoons/captions deleted by the mods, even though I thought they were pretty damn funny, namely this, this, and this. That first one is an appropriate response to creationut quote salads.

107 posted on 07/06/2005 9:22:39 AM PDT by RightWingAtheist (Creationism is not conservative!)
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To: RadioAstronomer
Biblical interpretation is murkier than some may think.

Oh, please. Biblical interpretation is simplicity itself. The Bible means exactly what it says, except when it doesn't, and you can tell which is which because everyone who knows the Bible knows the difference even when no one agrees on what any of it means or what the differences are.

108 posted on 07/06/2005 9:22:56 AM PDT by Gumlegs
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To: Gumlegs

You'd probably appreciate this website:

www.biblegateway.com

you can put in one verse and select all the different verisons/translations of the Bible. Find which interpretation suits you best and go with that verison of the Bible! (Actually, it's a pretty interesting site. You can see where the confusion between different Christian sects comes in)


109 posted on 07/06/2005 9:38:59 AM PDT by Hoodlum91 (Always do sober what you said you'd do drunk. That will teach you to keep your mouth shut.)
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To: dread78645
Intellectual dishonesty in the name of religion is a virtue.

Advice from that paradigm of book-banning, indulgence-selling, jew-baby-kidnapping social virtue, the medieval catholic church: the inventor of forced jewish ghettoization, the crusades, the inquisition, the 100 years war, and the wholesale torture, murder or persecution of jews, scientists, witches, Anabaptists, and innumerable other who happened to entertain philosophical disagreements with the Vatican. The institution the burned Geordono Bruno, and imprisoned Galileo for life, even though the persecutors knew they were speaking the truth.

My guess would be that God is vastly ashamed of you.

110 posted on 07/06/2005 9:41:41 AM PDT by donh (qua)
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To: RadioAstronomer

Good grief right back. Ever heard of an example? Or do you posit that that it not something claimed by evolution's teachings?


111 posted on 07/06/2005 9:41:59 AM PDT by MacDorcha (In Theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is.)
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To: Modernman

That's exactly my problem with evolutionary philosophy.

A rat is only a rat. Except in evolutionary terms, where they can become cats.


112 posted on 07/06/2005 9:43:32 AM PDT by MacDorcha (In Theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is.)
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To: balrog666

Periodically, a burr under the saddle is worth its weight in gold.


113 posted on 07/06/2005 9:43:56 AM PDT by furball4paws (One of the last Evil Geniuses, or the first of their return.)
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To: Hoodlum91

Actually, I've been there, but an overly-ambitious program to clean out my cache erased my record of the site. So thanks. I've been able to save it again.


114 posted on 07/06/2005 9:44:20 AM PDT by Gumlegs
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To: MacDorcha; balrog666; WildHorseCrash; RadioAstronomer; longshadow; PatrickHenry; DoctorMichael; ...
I'm sorry, but you all must be addressing some small fringe on the whole thing.

They're certainly "fringe", but they're hardly a small group.

I don't recall EVER reading in a newspaper that creationists were trying to put forth an effort to stop studying bacteria in an effort to better our health.

You're taking the cartoon way too literally, and thereby missing the point.

For that matter, even the *cartoon* doesn't suggest that any creationists are going to try to "stop" anyone from "studying bacteria". Read it again and see for yourself.

Note that instead, the creationists "educated" the scientists by explaining to them that an evolutionary view of microbiology was "deluded", and enlightened them by showing them that only through the Bible can one gain a true understanding of nature's ways, because all in nature takes place due to God's will and plan. The scientists, having seen the errors of their ways, commence gaining a better understanding of pathogens and disease by abandoning the faulty paradigm of evolutionary genetic change being responsible for the reactions of bacteria to exposure to antibiotics, and instead pursue the study of bacteria by examining how God's will drives the bacterial ecologies, and how God's plan for mankind is what's really in control of the spread of disease, the changes they undergo to become more virulent and resistant to treatement, and so on. This will be a *much* more fruitful line of study than that misguided evolutionary biology, don't you think?

Just because a strain shows resistance, doesn't make it "evolved" it makes it "adaptable" to those surroundings.

It "adapted to those surroundings" by mutating, chancing upon a novel DNA-encoded protein which happened to interact with the rest of the bacteria's cellular machinery in a way which gave it a new ability to resist the deadly action of the antibiotic, and natural selection then amplified this mutation and spread it throught the population in subsequent generations.

Please explain how that is *not* evolution.

Hint: It is. If you persist in your false assertion, you will only reveal your lack of understanding of biology in general, and evolution in particular.

Proving that it can resist certain things can save lives on that fact alone.

However, only evolutionary biology can correctly *predict* how quickly such evolutionary changes will arise under different conditions (and why) -- and predict which treatment methods will minimize the speed at which disease pathogens will become resistant to existing treatments, thus maximizing the length of time existing treatments remain effective (and saving the most lives in the long run).

*Your* method, on the other hand, would just "test" pathogens after the fact and say, "yup, they're resistant to our current drugs now, dang."

Only through evolutionary biology is there the *understanding* of the specific bacterial response to antibiotic exposure (and other kinds of treatments). Only through evolutionary biology is there an *understanding* of how the HIV virus constantly mutates to evade the body's immune system response (which *itself* employs the power of evolution to develop antibodies to intruders into the body).

This is why even Creationists do not disapprove of these studies.

But they *do* disapprove of teaching students that evolutionary biology is anything more than "just a theory" that actually describes how biological systems work. They *do* disapprove of spending money on research in the field of evolutionary biology. They *do* disapprove of research which results in further support of any sort for the reality of evolutionary change.

In short: The cartoon was more insulting than informative, and definately not honest.

Of course, that may have been why it was brought to us by this particular Freeper.

That's a very strong personal attack -- implying that he has a track record for willful dishonesty. Can you substantiate it, or are *you* perhaps the one being "more insulting than informative, and definitely not honest"?

As for the cartoon, I feel that it makes a number of important, valid points about the arrogance, the foolishness, and the vapidity of many creationsists. Like the ones in the cartoon, they would seek to replace evolutionary biology as a way of understanding biological systems, and replace it with... with *what*? Bible-"copatible" research, apparently, whatever the heck *that* would be. As I've pointed out to other posters on this thread already, if you think that's a laughable notion -- take a look at what happened in the Soviet Union when the "ideologically correct" paradigm of Lysenkoism replaced the "false doctrine" of evolutionary biology, and millions died due to the subsequent crop failures and starvation. Or look at how the Nazis rejected "Jewish science".

Don't think it can happen here? Don't kid yourself. There are literally millions of creationists who would be extremely happy to banish all mention of Darwin or natural selection from schools if they thought they could pull it off -- or failing that, they're pushing to confuse the issue in the minds of the next generation of students by "teaching the controversy", which really means highlighting anything they can think of (and whatever they can make up) in order to sow as much doubt as possible about evolutionary biology (and also geology, nuclear physics, cosmology, and any of the many other fields of science which produce results which they find threatening to their religious views), in order to slam minds shut against ever having a chance to consider evolutionary paradigms and natural mechanisms. Does that sound like a way to produce the next generation of productive science researchers?

Or is it more like this?

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

And if you think *that's* overstated, then you've never taken a real good look at the hundreds of creationist websites out there, read the creationists tracts, attended any creationist lectures or debates, or read any creationist books. They're not about understanding the world, doing research to learn more about how it works, or doing science. They're about using every rhetorical trick in the book (including outright lies) to poison the listener's mind into believing that evolutionary biology and related fields are tricks of Satan to turn people away from God, that it's "lies, all lies", that not only is there nothing of value in it, but that it's a mental trap, is barking up the wrong tree, and is the result of a conscious conspiracy by "humanists", blah blah blah.

There's not a fig's worth of difference between that, and denouncing Relativity as "Jewish science"...

The folks over at the "Panda's Thumb" make some other good points about the relevance of the comic in their own thread on the comic:

Brings up another good point, though (again). Creationists of all varieties love to crow about evolution being useless. But what’s the use of ID, YECism, and other creationist explanations?
And:
very funny indeed. The Bible should be taken seriously but not literally, and in this sense shares a key feature with other religious texts. Making fun of Christians (or any devout person) is not a goal of PT.
And:
At last, the much vaunted, long-awaited ID research program is underway! Congratulations, Dr. Wells!
And:
But… while creationists concede things like antibiotic resistance evolution - because they really have no choice - they need to explain this supposed barrier between “micro-” and “macro-“evolution. As far as I can tell, the real difference between them boils down to the presence or absence of “plausible deniability”.
And:
Whether or not creationists concede antibiotic resistance is not clear. Most concede that it happens, but Philip Johnson, for example, has denied that it serves as an example of new “information” evolving. This based on his claim that the antibiotic resistence was preexisting somewhere in the population, presumably since the bacteria were “created”. This of course is wrong, because resistance will evolve de novo in a monoculture. But the point being, even something as obvious as antibiotic resistence gets distorted by creationists.
And:
So Johnson believes that a created ur-bacteria came factory-equipped with the mechanism to defeat antibiotics, huh? And he WORSHIPS this creator? A planet covered in landmines, and Johnson just kneels and kisses the enthroned engineer’s tarnished diadem. A truly horrifying conceit.
And:

Mosnar, your blithe dismissal of the cartoon is rather petulant.  First of all, it is meant to be humorous.  If you find it offensive, perhaps that’s why everyone else finds it funny. 

Secondly, as I pointed out above, creationists say things which are plainly wrong about antibiotic resistance, so it’s not a straw-man to poke fun at them about it in general.  The whole point of humor of this sort is to take some tendency that people have and poke fun at it by blowing it out of proportion.  If the cartoonist used something normal and mundane, it wouldn’t be funny. 

Third, what I see as the target of humor here isn’t the creationist attitude towards antibiotic resistance, it’s the strident and aggressive means by which creationists push themselves on others.  While there’s obviously no such thing as the Creationist Patrol (again, exaggeration is what makes it funny), creationists in recent years have conducted a heavy-handed lobbying campaign aimed at using the political system to overcome their rejection by the scientific community.  See for example William Dembski’s bizarre fantasy about forcing evolutionists to testify in front of McCarthy-style Congressional hearings.  A real-life Creationist Patrol would probably be less bothersome than what Dembski proposes. 

Fourth, there isn’t always (or even that often) a distinction between creation/evolution and bible/science.  Noah’s Ark and the Tower of Babel are indispensible parts of the YEC worldview, which is by far the most popular form of creationism.

Fifth, the cartoon says nothing about ID, so I don’t know why you bring it up.  Unless you believe that ID is the same thing as creationism, which would be a nice admission.  Nor is there anything which could be construed as “anti-Christian” unless you assume, quite wrongly, that all Christians are YECs. 

And:
Gee, Mosnar. As a Christian, I didn’t find the comic insulting to Christians at all. “Anti-Christian” propaganda? I saw none. What ARE you talking about ?
And:
Anti-nutcase propaganda maybe, but I didn’t see anything that offended me and I’m Christian. Mind explaining what is anti-Christian about the cartoon, rather than simply having a shot at evangelical hypocrites?
And:

Go to Answers in Genesis, or trueorigins.org, or some of the creationist nutjob sites, mosnar, and you’ll see that what is described here at PT isn’t an over-exaggeration or caricature.  Turn on your local Christian broadcast radio station and listen for a few days — you’ll hear that evolution-bashing is a key element of modern fundamentalism.

Yes, emotions run high.  There are a lot of individual reasons for that. Many people here are scientists, and they are (and should be) angry that morons are deliberately belittling and misrepresenting their life’s work.  Others have different reasons, of course.

But trust me:  these creationists really are out there.  If anything, most of the people here are under-reacting.


115 posted on 07/06/2005 9:47:06 AM PDT by Ichneumon
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To: MacDorcha
In short: The cartoon was more insulting than informative, and definately not honest.

Your example, regarding stem cell research, ought to tell you something, but apparently doesn't. The only thing that stops creationists from eliminating vast fields of biological study is their lack of political power. For an example of how creationists behaved when they had political power, see the Trial of Galileo.

116 posted on 07/06/2005 9:50:39 AM PDT by donh (qua)
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Another stupendous Ichneumon post placemarker


117 posted on 07/06/2005 9:51:24 AM PDT by Thatcherite (Conservative and Biblical Literalist are not synonymous)
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To: Gumlegs
Oh, please. Biblical interpretation is simplicity itself. The Bible means exactly what it says, except when it doesn't, and you can tell which is which because everyone who knows the Bible knows the difference even when no one agrees on what any of it means or what the differences are.

Often, the rule of thumb appears to be, "if what it la passage iterally says is something I agree with, then it means exactly that, and if what it literally says is not something I agree with, then it's figurative, or needs to be considered in a larger context, or allegorical, or a different convenant, or... just one of those parts we try to put out of our minds".

118 posted on 07/06/2005 9:55:19 AM PDT by Ichneumon
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To: Thatcherite; Ichneumon

119 posted on 07/06/2005 9:57:45 AM PDT by RightWingAtheist (Creationism is not conservative!)
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To: Ichneumon
In some religions, you are free to interpret the bible on your own, and even encouraged to do so, like Judaism. Doesn't mean you are right, but you are at least encouraged to think. But fundies get the message from Elmer Gantry and he says, "March!" and they march forth. Normally reasonable people become mindless automatons.
120 posted on 07/06/2005 10:00:40 AM PDT by furball4paws (One of the last Evil Geniuses, or the first of their return.)
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