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Leaked PBS Memo Reveals Improper Political Agenda
Discovery Institute via US Newswire ^ | 09/27/2001 | Discovery Institute

Posted on 09/27/2001 7:43:35 AM PDT by Nora

Discovery Institute: Memo Reveals 'Evolution' Agenda


U.S. Newswire
27 Sep 6:00

Leaked PBS Memo Reveals Improper Political Agenda Behind 'Evolution' Series, Says Discovery Institute


To: National Desk, Science and Education Reporters
Contact: Mark Edwards of the Discovery Institute, 206-292-0401, ext. 107;
e-mail: medwards@discovery.org

SEATTLE, Sept. 27 /U.S. Newswire/ -- An internal PBS memo made public today reveals an improper political agenda behind WGBH/Clear Blue Sky's ongoing series "Evolution", according to the Seattle-based Discovery Institute. The memo describes how "Evolution" will be used to influence government officials and promote political action in order to shape how evolution is taught in public schools.

Dated June 15, 2001, the memo bears the title "The Evolution Controversy, Use It or Lose It: Evolution Project/WGBH Boston" The document outlines the overall goals of the ongoing PBS series Evolution and describes the marketing strategy for the series. The complete text of the PBS memo is posted at http://www.reviewevolution.com.

According to the document, which was leaked by a source within PBS, one of the goals of "Evolution" is to "co-opt existing local dialogue about teaching evolution in schools." Another goal is to "promote participation," including "getting involved with local school boards."

In addition, the document identifies "government officials" as one of the target audiences for the series, and it describes a publicity campaign accompanying the series that will include writing op-eds for newspapers and "guerilla/viral marketing."

"Clearly, one purpose of 'Evolution' is to influence Congress and school boards and to promote political action regarding how evolution is taught in public schools," says Discovery Institute President Bruce Chapman. "In fact, 'Evolution's' marketing plan seems to have the trappings of a political campaign."

"Public television is funded in part by American taxpayers, and it should be held to high standards of fairness. It is inappropriate for public broadcasting to engage in activities designed to directly influence the political process by promoting one viewpoint at the expense of others," said Chapman.

According to Discovery Institute's John West, the political agenda behind "Evolution" is made even more explicit by its enlistment of Eugenie Scott as one of the official spokespersons for the series.

Scott runs the National Center for Science Education (NCSE), an advocacy group that by its own description is dedicated to "defending the teaching of evolution in the public schools." According to the group's Web site, the NCSE provides "expert testimony for school board hearings," supplies citizens with "advice on how to organize" when "faced with local creationist challenges," and assists legal organizations that litigate "evolution/creation cases."

"The NCSE is a single-issue group that takes only one side in the political debate over evolution in public education," says West, an Associate Professor of Political Science at Seattle Pacific University. "It is inappropriate for public television to enlist NCSE's executive director as an official spokesperson for this program."

------
Founded in 1990, Discovery Institute is a non-profit, non- partisan public policy center for science, technology, regional development, environment, and defense. More information about the Institute and its activities can be found at www.discovery.org.

KEYWORDS:
SCIENCE, EDUCATION

-0-
/U.S. Newswire 202-347-2770/
09/27 06:00
Copyright 2001, U.S. Newswire


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
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To: Nyralthotep
Unfortuantely they assume that the only way the latter element can be present is by decay but they don't actually know what the proportions of the elements are because again, nobody was there to test the sample after it's formation

Not true. Due to the fact that each daughter product has its own rate of decay, the scientist can look at the ratio of all of the daughter products and determine quite accurately the origional ratios of the isotopes/elements.

141 posted on 09/27/2001 12:51:56 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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Comment #142 Removed by Moderator

To: wardaddy
Hitler was Catholic, sorry, and hid behind his religeon while usurping control of Germany. Muhamad Ali had a great answer the other night when asked how he felt about what those of his faith did to the USA, maybe someone can quote it, I would have to paraphrase.
143 posted on 09/27/2001 12:57:40 PM PDT by marsis
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To: wardaddy
And, I wasn't picking out only the Christians, it is fundamentalist belief that can lead to depravity. And I omitted the Jewish faith, please include with the rest.

"Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it with religious conviction." -- Blaise Pascal
144 posted on 09/27/2001 1:02:11 PM PDT by marsis
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To: Southack
There is no evidence of inanimate objects evolving into any animated form whatsoever. This means that there is utterly no EVIDENCE to support the first required step of the Evolutionary Process on an inanimate planet.

Let's Amend that statement. There is no DIRECT evidence to support that first step. However, there are indirect steps all over the universe that sure lead me to believe that all we have to do is continue looking. For example, deep in the heart of giant million solar mass molecular clouds, astronomers have been finding complex organic molecules. If organic molecules can form out in the middle of nowehere through simple collisional processes, who is to say that complex organic molecules didn't form here on earth? Is it such a leap to bridge the gap between intermediate complex molecules to the really complex things like amino acids and DNA? I don't think so. I definitely think we have to KEEP LOOKING! The data is out there to support abiogenesis, we just have to find it.

I see, however, that you have religiousesque FAITH is said theory even without said evidence. That's fine, but call your beliefs religion because they aren't based upon tangible scientific evidence.

What you seem to call faith, I would call Inductive Reasoning. It is an important step in any theoretical endeavor.

145 posted on 09/27/2001 1:03:59 PM PDT by ThinkPlease
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To: Sicon
Facts?? I am an anthropology major and have taken almost 30 hours worth of archaeology classes and several hours of independant studies with profs, and I will tell you that not one of them could show proof, with all their big words, that evolution is a fact...Most don't even try. Some do...Can you prove that creation is a fable, or that evolution is more than a theory? thats what I though.....
146 posted on 09/27/2001 1:06:31 PM PDT by ag2000jon
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To: Nyralthotep
anything more than theories. I don't want theories taught to my children as fact. I want them taught as theories

The facts do not support creationism as being taught as a theory.

147 posted on 09/27/2001 1:12:40 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: woollyone
They're shrimp, not fish. There's an evolved protocol in which the shrimp advertise themselves by extending their antennae from their hiding places. The fish respond by hovering nearby in a "non-threatening" (I assume that to mean "head-averted") posture.

In the wild, cleaner shrimp make their living by picking parasites and necrotic tissue off fish. The shrimp typically rest upside down under ledges with their white antennae sticking out to advertise their cleaning services. Fish solicit cleaning by taking a particular posture near the shrimp that indicates the fish is not a threat. The shrimp swim out and climb all over the fish, picking it over for edible morsels, and even reaching into the gills or climbing into the mouths of large fish.

To get to your fore-ordained conclusion, you leap to a couple of assumptions: 1) there's no benefit if the shrimp aren't doing the teeth, and 2) there's no way for the fish to live without the shrimp. You build a wall of impossibility around the existing situation and claim it could not have evolved.

The shrimp's service is beneficial, yes, but not essential. Many fish, not just barracudas, use the cleaner shrimp. It confers an advantage to the fish where available (ie, where there are cleaner shrimp). But there are fish including barracudas in many places without cleaner shrimp. The service is not essential.

Note too that the shrimp don't just work inside the fishes mouths. They work all over the body. Thus, the problem is no different than having birds cleaning parasites from hippos or crocodiles. You don't have to have full-blown trust up front. It's enough if a hungry critter takes a chance and snatches a meal from the hide of a nearby predator and the predator experiences relief from that maddening irritation. That will get things going.

But let's step back and look at what you attempted in another way. You claimed not to know of a single transitonal species save a questionable feathered dinosaur. That's pretty sad. Challenged on that, you revert to a bit of badly-memorized stump-the-dummies minutiae, demolished in a single web search.

Cheering for the gaps. Rooting for ignorance. This "science" offers no progress.

148 posted on 09/27/2001 1:13:18 PM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: ThinkPlease
***How about the fact that "our rabid religious nuts" don't make a habit of murdering those who disagree with them? ***

You might want to share that info with some of the anti-abortion crowd, what with their website with the crossed off names and all.

=====================================================

Add to your response the fact that the victims of the Spanish Inquisition and witches of Salem might like to take issue with that remark.

149 posted on 09/27/2001 1:14:27 PM PDT by longshadow
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To: Southack
One could say the same thing about various automobiles over the years, yet it wasn't the cars per se which evolved, but rather the DESIGNERS of the cars evolved.

There's no evidence for cars coming into being via reproductive acts by other cars. Living things seldom come into being except by the reproductive acts of other living things. So where does it make sense to put the evolution?

150 posted on 09/27/2001 1:18:27 PM PDT by VadeRetro
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To: marsis
"Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it with religious conviction." -- Blaise Pascal

144 Posted on 09/27/2001 13:02:09 PDT by marsis

"with religous conviction"...especially darwinst-evolution-marxists--statist--"secular--materialist"--RELIGION-false history-science combined-CONVICTION...unquestioned!

EVOLUTION is Science--inevitable! What a mantra-MONSTER!!

151 posted on 09/27/2001 1:18:27 PM PDT by f.Christian
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To: longshadow
Add to your response the fact that the victims of the Spanish Inquisition and witches of Salem might like to take issue with that remark.

Huh? Please come up with an instance within 300 years of the present time to recieve credit. Heck, at least they had trials, albeit total shams. I think the church has come along way.

152 posted on 09/27/2001 1:20:30 PM PDT by KC_Conspirator
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To: ThinkPlease
"If organic molecules can form out in the middle of nowehere through simple collisional processes, who is to say that complex organic molecules didn't form here on earth? Is it such a leap to bridge the gap between intermediate complex molecules to the really complex things like amino acids and DNA? I don't think so. I definitely think we have to KEEP LOOKING! The data is out there to support abiogenesis, we just have to find it."

Organic molecules exist in their precise form to begin life on almost every deceased human, yet scientists seem to have a problem animating said stiffs in the laboratory.

And I'm all for continuing to search for evidence of abiogenesis, but let's not kid ourselves, scientists haven't found any sort of said evidence to date (other than wild-eyed jumping up and down when they find various acids such as vinegar that exist - gasp - in the wild).

But the jump from vinegar to DNA is an insurmountable one because DNA is comprised of perfectly ordered organic molecules formed in mathematical Base-4 pairs (A, C, G, and T elements). Moreover, these Base-4 pairs of elements are grouped into machine-readable subroutines known to us as "genes." These genes are capable of precisely replicating desired behavior, too. That's hardly the sort of thing that one would expect to find happening at random.

In fact, DNA houses more orderly and complex code than any current human-derived software systems. Again, that's very unlikely to happen by accident. Consider that the DNA for the simplist life forms has more code than that for the Microsoft Windows operating system. Is Windows really very likely to be formed by accident in nature (well, some MS bashers might have a few cute comments on that, I suppose). Further, our human-derived software systems break down to Binary (i.e. Base-2) code. That's an order of magnitude less complicated than Base-4 DNA.

So is it really such a leap to bridge the gap between intermediate complex molecules to the really complex things like amino acids and DNA? Absolutely.

In fact, it appears preposterous.

153 posted on 09/27/2001 1:21:06 PM PDT by Southack
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To: rvoitier
Evolution makes me wonder that if we came from apes, then why are they still here?

Good question. We and the apes had a common ancestor. That's why we're both here.

154 posted on 09/27/2001 1:22:14 PM PDT by dbbeebs
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To: Southack
I see, however, that you have religiousesque FAITH is said theory even without said evidence. That's fine, but call your beliefs religion because they aren't based upon tangible scientific evidence.

There is a tremendous amount of scientific evidence for evolution. On the other hand, Genesis falls down rather badly when it comes to the order of creation. It has plants being formed before the sun or the moon was in the sky.

When I go out to the creationist web sites or listen to the Christian radio programs, I find it quite amazing the lengths that are taken to try and fit the observed phenomena and current day discoveries into the mold described by Genesis. For example, geologists long ago rejected a worldwide flood, however, fantastic explanations abound in the creationist circles to try and re-establish this as an actual event.

Genesis is not a scientific description of the formation of this universe. In fact from a scientific viewpoint Genesis is wrong.

155 posted on 09/27/2001 1:22:31 PM PDT by RadioAstronomer
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To: VadeRetro
"There's no evidence for cars coming into being via reproductive acts by other cars. Living things seldom come into being except by the reproductive acts of other living things. So where does it make sense to put the evolution?"

That would seem to say that Life is necessary as a prior condition for Evolution to proceed. Thus, you have just given credibility to the concept that a living Designer is required as a precursor for both Evolution and Life.

156 posted on 09/27/2001 1:24:20 PM PDT by Southack
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To: KC_Conspirator
Perhaps the best way to get back at PBS is to do without television entirely! I've been TV FREE since 1974, and I encourage others to do likewise. One might as well kick the television set right out the window!
157 posted on 09/27/2001 1:26:08 PM PDT by BrucefromMtVernon (NoTVPeriod!)
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To: PatrickHenry
Only a sincere desire to take back education from the Taliban creationists,

What a pathetic statement. The taliban enforces their views through government which is how evolutionists enforce their views. The public schools prey on children and the taxpayer to enforce their views. The creationists want to discuss theories. It is the evolutionists who want to promote religious dogma when they present only their theories as fact.

158 posted on 09/27/2001 1:27:00 PM PDT by PuNcH
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To: RadioAstronomer
"There is a tremendous amount of scientific evidence for evolution."

I disagree. In fact, there is NO EVIDENCE of an inanimate object evolving into an animated life form.

Considering that current speculation is that the Earth was first lifeless, that first living form would have to evolve out of that inanimate, lifeless environment for Evolutionary theory to be taken seriously.

And since that evidence doesn't exist and can't be replicated in the lab, young children shouldn't be taught such speculative nonsense.

159 posted on 09/27/2001 1:28:29 PM PDT by Southack
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To: marsis
In the spirit of maintaining cordiality, I would admit to my knowledge that yes Hitler was born to the Christian faith but his own particular religious practices were basically mythological. They were an amalgamation of Teutonic legend and supremacy mixed with a good dose of xenophobia and eugenics (which is ironically closer to the evolutionary than creationist perspective). Further, his persecution of some Catholics and clerics is undeniable.

Regards

160 posted on 09/27/2001 1:28:51 PM PDT by wardaddy
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