Thursday, November 26, 2009

Opinion

John Aloysius Farrell

The Anti-Evolution Movement in Texas Highlights Idiot America

July 13, 2009 10:51 AM ET | John Aloysius Farrell | Permanent Link | Print

By John Aloysius Farrell, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Lest we think, as we celebrate the anniversary of the Scopes Monkey Trial, that the forces of ignorance and superstition have been thoroughly vanquished on the issue of evolution, news arrives from Texas, where its loony secessionist governor has appointed a flat-earth type to chair the state board of education.

It could have been worse. Gail Lowe is not quite so zealous as a rival candidate, Cynthia Dunbar, who believes that "intelligent design"—i.e. religion—should be taught in public school biology classes. Nor is she as bad as Don McLeroy, a creationist whose appointment for another term as chairman was rejected by the state Senate.

Lowe is a trimmer. She is not as outspoken as Dunbar or McLeroy, though she often voted with them in a bloc of seven social conservatives. She apparently believes that there is scientific evidence to support the notion that a supernatural Supreme Being created Man and Earth, and wants this weighed equally with Darwin's theory of evolution, which she finds inherently flawed. She told Texas Monthly that she and other creationist sympathizers "don't believe evolution ought to be taught as a fact."

Which is sad, as it contributes to the general dumbing down of our nation. And it is a bit scary, for those whose kids attend public schools in other states, in that textbook publishers tend to ponder the huge Texas market when they edit their biology texts.

For a good (if painful) laugh about creationism and other bits of American lunacy, try our pal Charles Pierce's new book Idiot America. It's a funny, sly version of an argument made recently by Al Gore in The Assault on Reason, and by the brilliant Susan Jacoby in The Age of American Unreason

Pierce opens with a tour of the Creation Museum in Kentucky, where dinosaurs are depicted, living Flintstone style (some of them have saddles!) in Eden, and being taken on Noah's Ark, two by two, T-Rex and Raptor and the rest, with the other animals and Noah's family.

But Pierce makes some serious points amid the craziness, in these days when so many people believe—because they saw it on the Internet—that cell phones can pop popcorn, or that President Obama wasn't born in the United States.

"The rise of Idiot America... is essentially a war on expertise," writes Pierce. It "reflects—for profit, mainly, but also, and more cynically, for political advantage ... the breakdown of the consensus that the pursuit of knowledge is a good."

In Idiot America, the years of study and hard-won wisdom of a scientist "carry no more weight on the subject of biology than do the thunderations of some turkeyneck preacher out of the Church of Christ's Own Parking Structure in DeLand, Florida," Pierce writes. "Less weight, in fact, because the scientist is an 'expert' and therefore, an 'elitist.'"

It would be funnier, if Pierce wasn't so right.

Yabba Dabba Do.

Tags: evolution | science

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Reader Comments

Open minded but not empty minded?

Have you heard of fossils and carbon dating, core samples from the Earth and from glaciers? Do you know the state of the scientific methodology that is a record of our planet's geological history over millions of years? Haven't you been informed of research that shows that evolution is still occurring among some species even now? Or do you just pick or choose the science that you want to because it affirms your views?

The theory of evolution has much evidence to support, if not prove it's probability as truth. I believe this, but it does nothing to dissuade me from a belief in an intelligent force creating existence even now, and I can only sadly smile at those who would limit that Creative Power that is so unlimited that we can scarcely conceive it's full nature.

And it is particularly unlikely that a king who was more interested in controlling his populace than in spiritual truth, got it right. You do a great disservice to what many call God in suggesting that it couldn't have created or allowed evolution to transpire. Haven't you heard, the Lord works in mysterious ways!?!

We humans, through whatever forces of creation, have been given very fine minds with which to inquire into the true nature of reality, and not to do so is sad, to discourage it is shameful, and I dare say heretical in disservice to the seeking of truth.

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John Aloysius Farrell is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. An award-winning Washington reporter, he has written for The Boston Globe and The Denver Post and is the author of Tip O’Neill and the Democratic Century and an upcoming biography of the great American defense attorney, Clarence Darrow.

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