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View Full Version : Republican Cites Anti-Copernican and Darwinian Website


Tony
19th February 2007, 04:43 PM
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/texassouthwest/stories/DN-evolution_14tex.ART.State.Edition1.298e1cb.html

AUSTIN – The second most powerful member of the Texas House has circulated a Georgia lawmaker's call for a broad assault on teaching of evolution.

House Appropriations Committee Chairman Warren Chisum, R-Pampa, used House operations Tuesday to deliver a memo from Georgia state Rep. Ben Bridges.

The memo assails what it calls "the evolution monopoly in the schools."

"Indisputable evidence – long hidden but now available to everyone – demonstrates conclusively that so-called 'secular evolution science' is the Big Bang, 15-billion-year, alternate 'creation scenario' of the Pharisee Religion," writes Mr. Bridges, a Republican from Cleveland, Ga. He has argued against teaching of evolution in Georgia schools for several years.

He then refers to a Web site, http://www.fixedearth.com/, that contains a model bill for state Legislatures to pass to attack instruction on evolution as an unconstitutional establishment of religion.

Mr. Bridges also supplies a link to a document that describes scientists Carl Sagan and Albert Einstein as "Kabbalists" and laments "Hollywood's unrelenting role in flooding the movie theaters with explicit or implicit endorsement of evolutionism."

Yet more evidence that the right-wing seeks to take American down the path to dark age ignorance.

Mephisto
19th February 2007, 10:13 PM
Yet more evidence that the right-wing seeks to take American down the path to dark age ignorance.

Although I couldn't explain why; I tend to view the religious right as a separate entity from from the hawkish-right because they're more concerned with fairy tales that don't involve WMD.

I have the pleasure of knowing several conservative friends who bemoan the fact that the Republican party has somehow latched itself to the religious right and generally treat them like a socially-inept alcoholic cousin who shows up at your workplace obnoxiously telling racist jokes.

It's really too bad that we can't give them a state of their own (Florida, maybe?) where they can reign supreme and forego science while they teach myths and fairy-tales as truth. ;)

This Guy
20th February 2007, 05:05 AM
Although I couldn't explain why; I tend to view the religious right as a separate entity from from the hawkish-right because they're more concerned with fairy tales that don't involve WMD.

I have the pleasure of knowing several conservative friends who bemoan the fact that the Republican party has somehow latched itself to the religious right and generally treat them like a socially-inept alcoholic cousin who shows up at your workplace obnoxiously telling racist jokes.

It's really too bad that we can't give them a state of their own (Florida, maybe?) where they can reign supreme and forego science while they teach myths and fairy-tales as truth. ;)

I'd say give them Montana. No one lives there anyway, and it wouldn't impact Spring Break so much ;)

Mephisto
20th February 2007, 05:27 AM
I'd say give them Montana. No one lives there anyway, and it wouldn't impact Spring Break so much ;)

:) Maybe Wyoming, I don't think anyone goes there for spring break.

Hutch
20th February 2007, 07:03 AM
:) Maybe Wyoming, I don't think anyone goes there for spring break.

Nah, but why give them Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons (they'd probably change the name of the Grand Tetons to something less risque anyway)

North Dakota is perfect.

Mephisto
20th February 2007, 07:25 AM
Nah, but why give them Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons (they'd probably change the name of the Grand Tetons to something less risque anyway)

North Dakota is perfect.

I'd rather they'd get Montana - the Sioux have suffered enough. ;)

Madalch
20th February 2007, 10:00 AM
I'd rather they'd get Montana - the Sioux have suffered enough.

Don't give them anything that borders Canada, please. They might leak- ewwww.

Come to think of it, Pat Buchanan would probably build his "Great Wall" along the border, but still...

Overman
20th February 2007, 10:21 AM
:) Maybe Wyoming, I don't think anyone goes there for spring break.


I am down for florida...

"Teach me Overman, Teach me your sexy secular ways!!!"

-hehe!

MajorOrgan
20th February 2007, 05:54 PM
It's really too bad that we can't give them a state of their own (Florida, maybe?) where they can reign supreme and forego science while they teach myths and fairy-tales as truth. ;)

They already beat you to it.

christianexodus.org/