Posted on 01/19/2007 6:23:01 PM PST by Lorianne
In last weeks eSkeptic , we published highlights from a press release issued by PEER (Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility), a Washington D.C.-based environmental watchdog group. That press release, dated December 28, 2006, was headlined:
HOW OLD IS THE GRAND CANYON? PARK SERVICE WONT SAY Orders to Cater to Creationists Makes National Park Agnostic on Geology
The first sentence of the release reads:
Washington, DC Grand Canyon National Park is not permitted to give an official estimate of the geologic age of its principal feature, due to pressure from Bush administration appointees.
Unfortunately, in our eagerness to find additional examples of the inappropriate intrusion of religion in American public life (as if we actually needed more), we accepted this claim by PEER without calling the National Park Service (NPS) or the Grand Canyon National Park (GCNP) to check it. As a testimony to the quality of our readers, however, dozens immediately phoned both NPS and GCNP, only to discover that the claim is absolutely false. Callers were told that the Grand Canyon is millions of years old, that no one is being pressured from Bush administration appointees or by anyone else to withhold scientific information, and all were referred to a statement by David Barna, Chief of Public Affairs, National Park Service as to the parks official position. Therefore, our interpretive talks, way-side exhibits, visitor center films, etc. use the following explanation for the age of the geologic features at Grand Canyon, the document explains.
If asked the age of the Grand Canyon, our rangers use the following answer: The principal consensus among geologists is that the Colorado River basin has developed in the past 40 million years and that the Grand Canyon itself is probably less than five to six million years old. The result of all this erosion is one of the most complete geologic columns on the planet.
Understandably, many of our readers were outraged by both the duplicity of the claim and our failure to fact check it. One park ranger wrote us:
Youre a day late and a dollar short on this one. As a national park ranger, I found most of PEERs findings to be bogus. So have others: http://parkrangerx.blogspot.com
A Grand Canyon park interpreter wrote:
This is incorrect. I have NEVER been told to present non-science based programs. In fact, I received talking points demanding that Grand Canyon employees present programs BASED ON SCIENCE and that we must use the scientific version supported by the National Science Foundation and the National Academy of Sciences. As an interpreter I have shared the creation story of the Hopi people and the Paiute people because it is culturally relative. I used these stories as a tool to introduce the scientific story. Be confident there are good people running government, too.
One of our readers directly challenged Jeff Ruch, the Executive Director of PEER:
When I challenged that PEER guy to show me some evidence and provided him evidence to the contrary, he didnt have much. I would say PEER did more than jump the gun. Id say they are spreading misinformation.
Another Grand Canyon park interpreter offered this explanation:
Ruchs attempts to insinuate a conspiratorial link between the NPS and organized religion are misguided and founded in fervent anti-Christian opposition, not reason or the law. Ruchs anti-Judeo-Christian bias is evidence by his lack of opposition to GCAs selling of Native American creation myths. His misinformation campaign aims to tarnish the reputation of the NPS to leverage his position that creationism books should not be sold in the GCA bookstore. Ive emailed a few of my contacts at GRCA, and so far, all deny any conspiracy and all freely give the canyons age in education programs (as does all official GRCA print material). Ill post updates as information becomes available. Until then, dont believe everything you read.
The reference to the creationism book being sold in the Grand Canyon bookstore Grand Canyon: A Different View by Tom Vail is true. It is sold in the inspiration section of the bookstore, alongside other books of myth and spirituality. In any case, the story is an old one now, and completely irrelevant to the claim that NPS employees are withholding information about the age of the canyon, and/or are being pressured to do so by Bush administration appointees.
Embarrassed and angered by all of this, I promptly phoned Jeff Ruch myself and inquired what evidence he has to support this claim. He initially pointed to the creationism book and the fact that the NPS has failed to address numerous challenges to the sale of same in their bookstore. When I pointed out that this is irrelevant to the claim in the press release, he then reminded me of the biblical passages that have been posted at places along the rim of the canyon. Again, I admonished, this is not evidence for his central claim. We went round and round on the phone until I finally gave up and hung up, convinced that he simply made up the claim out of whole cloth.
Not wishing to simply call Ruch a liar, and allowing myself to calm down a bit, I emailed him and asked:
Can you tell us who in the Bush administration put pressure on park service employees? Can you name one person in the GCNP staff who says that they are not permitted to give the official estimate of the age of the canyon?
He responded:
I do not know it is at the Directors level or above. We have been trying to find out for three years. Julie Cart, Los Angeles Times. I contacted Julie Cart at the Los Angeles Times, who was out of town on assignment, and got her editor, Frank Clifford, on the phone. Clifford knew all about the creationism book and the biblical passages on the rim of the canyon, but said that he had heard nothing about this new claim of Bush administration appointees silencing park service staff, and that if Julie knew of such a thing the Times would be most interested in following up with the story. I then reached Julie by email, who said that she too knew of no such silence on the part of park staffers regarding the age of the canyon.
Once again outraged and enraged , I emailed Ruch to ask him why he referenced Cart, who denied his central claim. He responded:
I referred you to Julie because of the response she got from the superintendents office when she covered the issue earlier not for any new claim.
Thanks a lot. I wasted several hours tracking down that false lead. Now at my wits end with this guy, I point blank asked him if he made it all up. He responded:
The interpretive staff at GCNP we are working with do not want to be identified and have gone into deep underground as the atmosphere at the park is now somewhat volatile.
Well, it would have been nice (not to mention ethical) if he would have said so in the first place. (I have now wasted about 10 hours of research time on this instead of other projects.) The referencing of sources who wish to remain anonymous is quite common in journalism and, in fact, there are laws protecting whistleblowers . The fact that no such reference was made until I pointedly accused Ruch of flatout lying makes me, well, skeptical of this explanation. His final statement to me doesnt make me any less skeptical:
We are issuing an amended release today that
deletes reference to what interpretive staff can and cannot say and features the NPS official statement that they provide geological information to the public. Then why did PEER issue that statement in the first place? In my opinion, this is why:
PEER is an anti-Bush, anti-religion liberal activist watchdog group in search of demons to exorcise and dragons to slay. On one level, thats how the system works in a free society, and there are plenty of pro-Bush, pro-religion conservative activist watchdog groups who do the same thing on the other side. Maybe in a Hegelian process of thesis-antithesis-synthesis we find truth that way; at least at the level of talk radio. But journalistic standards and scholarly ethics still hold sway at all levels of discourse that matter, and to that end I believe we were duped by an activist group who at the very least exaggerated a claim and published it in order to gain notoriety for itself, or worse, simply made it up.
To that end I apologize to all of our readers for not fact checking this story before publishing it on eSkeptic and www.skeptic.com. Shame on us. But shame on you too, Mr. Ruch, and shame on PEER, for this egregious display of poor judgment and unethical behavior.
Michael Shermer Publisher, Skeptic magazine Executive Director, the Skeptics Society mshermer@skeptic.com
Oh yeah, that's right. Leftists don't have to be accurate.
Anybody got any industrial strength egg remover they can loan this schmuck??
The Flagstaff city council was duped last week by dozens of faxes from prominent citizens opposing a zoning waiver for a proposed new hotel. The signatures on the faxes were later found to be false. The proposal was voted down by the council before the hoax was uncovered.
Believe me, there are environmentalist fanatics on the loose around here who see nothing at all wrong with "disinformation" campaigns.
(Nasty little Birkenstock sporting town. It used to be nice too before the liberal waves of immigrants took it over.)
So, "eSkeptic" is renaming itself "eDuped"?
Oh man I'm going to have fun with some liberals who were going off the rails with their "right wing extremist" rants over this story.
Who Mr. Shermer on the other side are making utterly false accusations? What are those accusations?
Why on Earth (or Gaia - haha) would a group that claims to be "skeptical" give any credence to an outfit that claims to be "a Washington D.C.-based environmental watchdog group"? That's a self-evident contradiction in terms. Washington DC is an urban hellhole. Anybody who could stand to live within commuting distance of the District cannot possibly have any care about or affinity with the environment. That should have set off the fraud alarms right away. The fact that it did not, gives one pause when evaluating how "skeptical" these self-proclaimed "skeptics" really are.
Did anyone see those flying pigs?
GRC sells the books causing the controversy, not the NPS. GRC is a private, non-profit group. They also sell American Indian books with creation myths. The book in question is in the inspirational section of the Park bookstore along with Hualapai Indian creationists stories.
This press release by PEER was really about not wanting a Christian creationist book being sold in a NPS bookstore. They appear to have "embellished" the truth about Bush et al putting a gag order on Park Rangers discussing the geological age of the Grand Canyon.
If you don't agree with creationist theory then ignore and don't buy the book. Likewise, if you don't believe in Hualapai Indian creationists theories, don't buy the book.
Don't restrict freedom of speech just becouse you don't agree with the opinion being expressed.
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