The Atheist Experience: Crippled dogs and one-trick ponies
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Saved by 1 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2008-12-01
- Cburell on 2008-12-01 - Tags change , creationism , science , evolution , christianity
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Highlighted by cburell
Highlighted by cburell
Highlighted by cburell
Now, after a speaker has done his three minutes, board members can ask questions of that speaker if they wish. I saw it coming even before it started. The instant the bell chimed on Dr. Bernal's address, creationist board member Terri Leo leapt out of the phone booth with her Supergirl costume on and hit the ground faster than a speeding bullet.
Her first agenda: discredit the recent survey, cited by Dr. Bernal, that showed 98% of biologists and science educators in Texas support evolution. "Who funded that study? Wasn't that study funded by the Texas Freedom Network?" Dr. Bernal admitted it was, but stated calmly that whoever funded the study was beside the point. He actually got in a good comeback to Leo, noting that even the science teachers selected by the SBOE to review the science standards voted in the majority. But Leo wasn't finished. "I always thought that taking polls wasn't how you do science." Well, of course not, and the poll wasn't an exercise in doing science. The science is already done. The point of the poll was simply to get a show of hands among professionals in the relevant fields as to what theory is appropriate to teach in classrooms. But this is the kind of dishonest rhetoric that creationists will throw out there to get the pro-science side on the defensive.
Highlighted by cburell
Note that Dr. Bernal only brought up religion in passing in his speech, pointing out that it's a private family matter and not fit for science class. Leo leapt on this like a hungry tiger, railing that the phrase "strengths and weaknesses" was not religious language, and that the only people making a big deal about religion supposedly being shoehorned into science curricula are "militant Darwinists."
I am not shitting you. She actually used that term, out loud, in front of a packed room, in her questioning of the very first speaker of the day.
Highlighted by cburell
Dr. Bernal responded quite impressively by bringing up — and I'm so glad he was the first speaker, which is when it needed to be brought up — that the SBOE had themselves enlisted known anti-evolutionists affiliated with the Discovery Institute, who have not exactly been secretive about their own religious and creationist agendas, to be among those assigned to review science standards. Specifically he asked (to the delight of the crowd), "Why is someone from an institute in Seattle being asked to review Texas science education standards?"
And here we saw, for the first time, the depth of the SBOE's egregious dishonesty they were going to display today. The presence of the DI's Stephen Meyer, and creationist textbook writers Charles Garner and Ralph Seelke was brought up many time by many speakers, and no one on the board would defend or even address it. They simply were not going to justify their actions in this regard to the public, or at least, they didn't in the hour I was there.
Highlighted by cburell
Highlighted by cburell
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on 2008-12-01 by cburell
Okay, so the TBOE is all creationist. They hire DI folks to come down to pollute the standards. They place religion over science. Got it. My questions: 1. Are BOE members elected or appointed? 2. How frequently are elections/appointments? 3. Why the language of "science standards for the NEXT DECADE"? 4. What's the best way to organize to elect educated BOE members, or else restrict candidacies to qualified (educated) people?


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