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Court Rules in Favor of Teacher Who Called Creationism 'Superstitious Nonsense'

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Love-Child of Cassandra and Sisyphus8/20/2011 9:36:27 pm PDT

re: #259 jaunte

Yeah, I saw that earlier when doing a google search on “creationism” news from today.

Amazingly, or maybe not amazingly, also from today is a rather lame attempt by NRO to move the spotlight from Perry onto his critics:

Rick Perry Pushes Their Buttons

The broader question, however, is: Why would anybody ask a politician about his views on a scientific question? Nobody ever asks what Sarah Palin thinks about dark matter, or what John Boehner thinks about quantum entanglement. (For that matter, I’ve never heard Keith Ellison pressed for his views on evolution.) There are lots of good reasons not to wonder what Rick Perry thinks about scientific questions, foremost amongst them that there are probably fewer than 10,000 people in the United States whose views on disputed questions regarding evolution are worth consulting, and they are not politicians; they are scientists. In reality, of course, the progressive types who want to know politicians’ views on evolution are not asking a scientific question; they are asking a religious and political question, demanding a profession of faith in a particular materialist-secularist worldview.

Take the question of global warming: Jon Huntsman was quick to declare his faith in the scientific consensus on global warming, and Rick Perry has been openly skeptical of it. Again keeping in mind that nobody really ought to care what either Huntsman or Perry thinks about the relevant science, both are making an error, and a grave one, in conceding that the question at hand is scientific at all. It is not; it is political. […]

Yeah right, it’s all those ” progressive types ” who are doing this to the poor candidates… certainly the Republican base don’t care now, do they?