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America's Taliban strikes again
Arkansas News Bureau ^ | 28 August 2006 | John Brummett

Posted on 08/28/2006 6:31:13 AM PDT by PatrickHenry

The Holocaust wasn't Hitler's fault. Darwin made him do it. Complicit as well are any who buy into the scientific theory that modern man evolved from lower animal forms.

That's the latest lunacy from one of our more fanatical right-wing American Christian television outfits, the Coral Ridge Ministries in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Coral Ridge espouses that America is not a free-religion nation, but a Christian one. It argues there should be no separation of church and state.

Thus it's America's Taliban, America's Shiite theocracy.

It certainly has a propensity for explaining or excusing Hitler. A few years ago it brought in a conference speaker to argue that American abortion was a more horrible atrocity than the Holocaust.

One year it disinvited Cal Thomas as a conference speaker after Brother Cal got too liberal. You're thinking I must be kidding. But I kid you not. Brother Cal had displayed the utter audacity to co-author a book contending that American Christian conservatives ought to worry a little more about spreading the gospel from the bottom of the culture up rather than from the top of politics down.

Now this: Coral Ridge is airing a couple of cable installments of a "documentary," called "Darwin's Deadly Legacy," that seek to make a case that, without Darwin, there could have been no Hitler.

Authoritative sources for the program include no less than columnist Ann Coulter, noted scientist, who says she is outraged that she didn't get instructed in Darwin's effective creation of Hitler when she was in school. She says she has since come to understand that Hitler was merely a Darwinist trying, by extermination of a group of people he considered inferior because of their religion and heritage, to "hurry along" the natural survival of the Aryan fittest.

Also quoted is Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Human Genome Project, who tells the Anti-Defamation League that his comments were used out of context and that he is "absolutely appalled" by the "utterly misguided and inflammatory" premise of Coral Ridge's report.

The documentary's theme is really quite simple: Darwin propounded the theory of evolution. Hitler came along and believed the theory. Hitler killed Jews. So, blame Darwin for the Holocaust. Blame, too, all others who agree with or advance Darwin's theory. Get back to God and Adam and Eve and all will be right again with the world.

"To put it simply, no Darwin, no Hitler," said Dr. D. James Kennedy, president of Coral Ridge Ministries. "The legacy of Charles Darwin is millions of deaths."

Obviously, the theme is breath-taking nonsense. You can't equate academic theory with murderous practice. You can't equate a thinker and a madman, or science and crime.

And you can't ever blame one man for another's actions. That once was a proud conservative precept. In a different context, you'll no doubt find Coral Ridge fervently preaching personal responsibility. Except, apparently, for Adolf Hitler, to whom these religious kooks issue a pass. Ol' Adolf, it seems, just fell in with a bad crowd.

By Coral Ridge's premise, Mohammed is to blame for Osama bin Laden. Actually, Coral Ridge might not argue with that. So how about this: The pope is to blame for the IRA. And Jesus is to blame for Mel Gibson, not to mention Coral Ridge Ministries.

[Omitted some author detail and contact info.]


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: abortion; blitheringimbecility; brummetslaw; christianhater; christophobia; coralridge; craniometrics; crevolist; djameskennedy; endautism; endgeneticdefects; endpoverty; eugenics; evolutionism; favouredraces; genefairy; genesis1; genius; hereditary; hereditarygenius; idiocy; ignorantdrivel; jerklist; keywordwars; mntslfabusethread; moronicarticle; naziscience; pantiestootight; racism; racistdarwin; sterilization; sterilizedeficient; sterilizethepoor; stupidistthreadever; theocracy; theophobia; thewordistruth; wodlist; worstsarticleever
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To: js1138

Non sequitur. How long has the Theory of Evolution existed? Not centuries.


521 posted on 08/29/2006 7:23:12 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: PatrickHenry
......."To put it simply, no Darwin, no Hitler," said Dr. D. James Kennedy, president of Coral Ridge Ministries. "The legacy of Charles Darwin is millions of deaths.".........

..is to....as....is to..

522 posted on 08/29/2006 7:29:47 AM PDT by DoctorMichael (A wall first. A wall now.)
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To: WildHorseCrash

Good post, thanks.


523 posted on 08/29/2006 7:33:58 AM PDT by L98Fiero (Evil is an exact science)
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To: DoctorMichael
Yes! It's all so clear! Thank you for your insight, frater meus in spuma laci. And always remember: E laco antiquo, omnia.
524 posted on 08/29/2006 7:53:20 AM PDT by PatrickHenry (The universe is made for life, therefore ID. Life can't arise naturally, therefore ID.)
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To: RegulatorCountry
Did Mendel's study of dominant and recessive traits in peas have any influence upon Nazi eugenics programs directed at human beings? Only to the degree that it added a further, scientific sheen of justification for eliminating people deemed undesireable, whether by the Eugenics League or by the Nazis in Germany.

That "only" seems a little disingenuous. Mendel's work didn't just provide an "added scientific sheen," it provided experimental and foundational justification for the core concepts of eugenics. Nazi geneticists implemented entire programs of "genetic cleansing" based upon notions that derive directly from Mendel.

Mendel did not, however, delve into the relative worth of this or that "race" to society. Galton did.

Surely you're not suggesting that Galton, or Darwin, invented racism.

And I trust that you aren't suggesting that all instances of ethnic cleansing and genocide post-Darwin have a "direct line" to him (or Galton, or Mendel). Somehow, I doubt you're going to find any connection between the ideas of Darwin and, for example, the genocides in Darfur, Bosnia, Cambodia, or Rwanda.

The Tutsi and the Hutu engaged in wholesale slaughter for the same, rather old-fashioned reason that Hitler targeted Jews -- ethnic and religious hatred and scapegoating -- and that "idea" has been around for a pretty long time.

525 posted on 08/29/2006 8:07:35 AM PDT by atlaw
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To: PatrickHenry
............"To put it simply, no Darwin, no Hitler," said Dr. D. James Kennedy, president of Coral Ridge Ministries. "The legacy of Charles Darwin is millions of deaths."..........

..........and of course it follows: No Jesus, No Jim Jones.

526 posted on 08/29/2006 8:08:54 AM PDT by DoctorMichael (A wall first. A wall now.)
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To: andysandmikesmom

Absolutely correct. Of course, sometimes ideas and inventions are created solely for evil. For example the nutjob that wanted to wipe the world of 80% ofd the population because he theorized this is the only way to save the earth.

But this is not the case for Darwin, Einstein and most others.


527 posted on 08/29/2006 8:09:16 AM PDT by Killborn (Pres. Bush isn't Pres. Reagan. Then again, Pres. Regan isn't Pres. Washington. God bless them all.)
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To: RegulatorCountry; js1138; PatrickHenry
Non sequitur. How long has the Theory of Evolution existed? Not centuries.

You are incorrect.

It is true that Darwin's book was published in 1859, a mere century and a half ago, but the foundations date back father than that.

Darwin, like all good scientists, built upon the work of those who had come before. One of those forerunners was Darwin's grandfather Erasmus Darwin, whose work "Zoönomia" (1976) started to lay the specific foundation of the ToE. Another was Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, who was publishing his work in the early 1800s, over two hundred years ago.

Heck, even Aristotle had speculated about evolution. So yes, "centuries" is appropriate.

If you are under the mistaken impression that Darwin and Darwin alone is responsible for the entirety of the Theory of Evolution, your understanding of the subject is limited indeed.

If you are furthermore under the impression that engaging in a puerile semantic debate will divert attention away from that ignorance, then you are once again mistaken.

528 posted on 08/29/2006 8:20:23 AM PDT by highball (Proud to announce the birth of little Highball, Junior - Feb. 7, 2006!)
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To: RegulatorCountry
Non sequitur. How long has the Theory of Evolution existed? Not centuries.

Actually it has, although Darwin's particular version has only been around about 150 years.

Is that the standard? Relativity and quantum theory should be questioned in high schools because they are less than a hundred years old? If so, what alternate theory would make the challenge?

And What alternate theory would challenge evolution? The proposition that some unnamed entity having unspecified powers did some unspecified thing or things at unspecified times using unspecified methods for unspecified reasons, is not a theory.

529 posted on 08/29/2006 8:21:36 AM PDT by js1138 (Well I say there are some things we don't want to know! Important things!")
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To: highball; RegulatorCountry; js1138; PatrickHenry
Ugh. Terrible typo.

"Zoönomia" was of course published in 1796, not 1976. Darn dyslexia.
530 posted on 08/29/2006 8:23:23 AM PDT by highball (Proud to announce the birth of little Highball, Junior - Feb. 7, 2006!)
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To: DoctorMichael

Indubitably. The proof is plain to see--Darwin and Jesus both had beards.


531 posted on 08/29/2006 8:24:01 AM PDT by ahayes ("If intelligent design evolved from creationism, then why are there still creationists?"--Quark2005)
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To: RunningWolf

Hitler used a lot of things to come to power and Nazism is based on many precepts and ideas. Acombination of pagan Nordic mythology with a facade of Christianity formed the NAzi religion while eugenics theory based on Social Evolution (as opposed to natural) and Germanic sense of racial superiority formed the basis of his foreign and domestic policy. With a healthy dosage of victimhood and anti-Semitism, Hitler was on his way.

Darwin's thoery is not evil, but the way Hitler used it is.


532 posted on 08/29/2006 8:25:36 AM PDT by Killborn (Pres. Bush isn't Pres. Reagan. Then again, Pres. Regan isn't Pres. Washington. God bless them all.)
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To: ahayes
Tell me, if Australopithecus is "ape-man", is he/it the actual missing link between man and ape? I haven't heard any scientist actually make that statement. If he is not, then he is either ape or man. Which is he? Wishing to fill the missing link gaps just doesn't get it. I would imagine if the "missing link" was found it would have been in my local paper. Just because those ancient apes walked upright a little straighter than some of the others does not make them a man.
533 posted on 08/29/2006 8:36:28 AM PDT by fish hawk
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To: atlaw

"Surely you're not suggesting that Galton, or Darwin, invented racism."

No, but they provided the scientific rationale for it, in the instance of Nazi genocide.


534 posted on 08/29/2006 8:41:03 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: DoctorMichael

"No Jesus, No Jim Jones."

There are several FRevo posts on these "Darwin - Hitler" threads that have sought to make just this equation. Validate or scorn, take your pick, but you can't have it both ways.


535 posted on 08/29/2006 8:44:19 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: highball
Reality is relative. Once the earth was flat to just about everyone. Once the sun rotated around the earth and if you said different you were put to death. You are anyone else living today have no actual real proof that an ape became a man. I believe that is why they call it a theory. You say science points that way but a fact of science has to be proved before it is no longer theory. Bottom line, it is still a theory, right. I don't care what you evolutionists believe, there is no real proof, but you do have very strong faith. So do I.
536 posted on 08/29/2006 8:45:15 AM PDT by fish hawk
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To: DoctorMichael; PatrickHenry
"'To put it simply, no Darwin, no Hitler,' said Dr. D. James Kennedy, president of Coral Ridge Ministries. 'The legacy of Charles Darwin is millions of deaths.'"

Actually, to be a tad more complete, no --

James Watt (condenser equipped steam engines), Richard Trevithick and George Stephenson (steam locomotives), William Aspdin (portland cement), Winchester, Spencer, Gatling, and Hotchkiss (repeating rifle, machine gun, and magazine), Alfred Nobel (dynamite), Karl Benz, Gottlieb Daimler, Wilhelm Maybach, and Rudolf Diesel (motor vehicles), Dr. Gerhard Peters (Zyklon B), etc., etc., etc.

-- no Hitler.

537 posted on 08/29/2006 8:46:02 AM PDT by atlaw
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To: fish hawk
If he is not, then he is either ape or man.

Human beings are apes. African Great Apes, specifically.

538 posted on 08/29/2006 8:47:37 AM PDT by WildHorseCrash
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To: highball

"It is true that Darwin's book was published in 1859, a mere century and a half ago, but the foundations date back father than that."

You're engaging in the historicism that was being mocked just upthread. Darwin apparently IS omnipresent and eternal, praise be! Either that, or you're seeking to diminish the importance of Darwin in authoring the theory of evolution, for the petty reason of covering for your own historical error.


539 posted on 08/29/2006 8:49:45 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: fish hawk
Tell me, if Australopithecus is "ape-man", is he/it the actual missing link between man and ape?

Not a missing link, a transitional.

Why do you assume there is only a single "missing link?" In actuality, there are many transitionals between ape-like critters and modern humans. Some are closer to ape-like, some closer to modern humans.

I haven't heard any scientist actually make that statement. If he is not, then he is either ape or man. Which is he?

Somewhere in between.

Wishing to fill the missing link gaps just doesn't get it. I would imagine if the "missing link" was found it would have been in my local paper.

It probably was in your local paper, but because of the odd definition you seem to have of "missing link" you missed it.

Just because those ancient apes walked upright a little straighter than some of the others does not make them a man.

No, but it does make them a transitional (sharing traits of earlier and later groups).

This is a transitional. Note its position in the chart which follows (hint--in the upper center):



Fossil: KNM-ER 3733

Site: Koobi Fora (Upper KBS tuff, area 104), Lake Turkana, Kenya (4, 1)

Discovered By: B. Ngeneo, 1975 (1)

Estimated Age of Fossil: 1.75 mya * determined by Stratigraphic, faunal, paleomagnetic & radiometric data (1, 4)

Species Name: Homo ergaster (1, 7, 8), Homo erectus (3, 4, 7), Homo erectus ergaster (25)

Gender: Female (species presumed to be sexually dimorphic) (1, 8)

Cranial Capacity: 850 cc (1, 3, 4)

Information: Tools found in same layer (8, 9). Found with KNM-ER 406 A. boisei (effectively eliminating single species hypothesis) (1)

Interpretation: Adult (based on cranial sutures, molar eruption and dental wear) (1)

See original source for notes:
Source: http://www.mos.org/evolution/fossils/fossilview.php?fid=33


Source: http://wwwrses.anu.edu.au/environment/eePages/eeDating/HumanEvol_info.html

540 posted on 08/29/2006 8:52:12 AM PDT by Coyoteman (Evolution is real, deal with it!)
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