[Mb-civic] Dark Ages Primary - Harold Meyerson - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Aug 31 04:33:06 PDT 2005
Dark Ages Primary
By Harold Meyerson
Wednesday, August 31, 2005; Page A23
What I want to know is, who walked the Earth first: the dinosaurs or
Strom Thurmond?
It seems that the advocates of fast-forward "intelligent design" -- the
folks who, by totaling up the biblical begats, believe that the universe
was created in 4004 B.C. -- are erecting mini-theme-parks that feature
secondhand dinosaur sculptures they've acquired in their scavengings. By
putting such Tyrannosaurus Wrecks on display, they mean to prove to the
public that people and dinosaurs once roamed the world together, just as
their biblical time-clock and that old Raquel Welch movie clearly
demonstrated.
Silly stuff, certainly, but at the rate we're going, it may make it into
the 2008 or 2012 Republican platform. Now that the president has
endorsed intelligent design, the social conservatives and religious
zealots who constitute an ever larger and louder wing of the Republican
base have been emboldened in their crusades for fundamentalist values
and against any science whose findings and methods run counter to their
beliefs.
School districts throughout the Bible Belt (and yes, it's time to start
resurrecting the coinages of H.L. Mencken, scourge extraordinaire of
early 20th-century Bible-Belt boobs) are busy demoting Darwinism to
history's dustbin. In late September, a Harrisburg, Pa., court will hear
yet another in a seemingly endless string of cases in which a local
school board has sought to compel high school science teachers to point
out the religious errors in the theory of evolution. The court will
doubtless rule against the school board. But now that the president
himself has said that intelligent design should be part of the
curriculum, too (which gives a whole new, afterlife-specific meaning to
the notion of No Child Left Behind), such school board creationism
probably will expand exponentially.
After all, recent polling shows that just 35 percent of Americans
believe that evolution is supported by evidence, while another 35
percent believe it is not.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/30/AR2005083001553.html?nav=hcmodule
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