To: doc30
Pinging...Didn't know this was still going on in GAIt never seems to end. I'm not eager to ping the list for this, because we've already deployed the list twice today, and one of those was for an education controversy in South Carolina. These education threads all involve the same issues, and I don't want to cause "ping fatigue" with too many threads going on at the same time, involving the same issue. Lemme mull it over. (Good article, however.)
6 posted on
12/14/2005 12:14:22 PM PST by
PatrickHenry
(Virtual Ignore for trolls, lunatics, dotards, common scolds, & incurable ignoramuses.)
To: b_sharp; Ichneumon; longshadow; CarolinaGuitarman; Thatcherite; MineralMan; Coyoteman; js1138; ...
Asking "the few" ... to ping, or not to ping?
9 posted on
12/14/2005 12:16:16 PM PST by
PatrickHenry
(Virtual Ignore for trolls, lunatics, dotards, common scolds, & incurable ignoramuses.)
To: PatrickHenry
I'm just surprised to see it in the science section of a Canadian newspaper!
33 posted on
12/14/2005 1:14:53 PM PST by
doc30
(Democrats are to morals what and Etch-A-Sketch is to Art.)
To: PatrickHenry
If it's unconstitutional to tell students to study evolution with an open mind, then what's not unconstitutional? said John West, a senior fellow with the Discovery Institute, a Seattle-based think tank that supports intelligent design, the belief that the universe is so complex it must have been created by a higher power. The judge is basically trying to make it unconstitutional for anyone to have a divergent view, and we think that has a chilling effect on free speech. Anyone who followed the Dover Trial can remember the discussion of what was considered worth a lawsuit up there. West is pretending he never heard any of that.
64 posted on
12/14/2005 3:28:58 PM PST by
VadeRetro
(Liberalism is a cancer on society. Creationism is a cancer on conservatism.)
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