[QUOTE=Bull Run;35417]Good God. Man, I know it's hard for you Libs to understand, but this is a Christain nation (even if it's not officially recognized...remember, the seperation of church and state clause is there to stop an official state religion, not prevent talk of religion in general). Get over it. No one is forcing you to believe in that entire concept.
I'm probably the least religious person you'll meet, frankly I don't believe in a lot of that gibberish. I see zero issue with having creationism taught, zero. I'm not saying FORCED on to students, but the facts taught to them. Or, more accurately, the shortcomings of evolution taught instead of saying that this is the answer...it should be this is the BEST answer we think we have (of course the earth used to be the center of the universe and was flat as well), here are the virtues, here are the shortcomings, and here are some alternative views on how life came to be.
Truth be told, evolution is 'faith based' in many respects. There are so many holes in evolution that it doesn't seem intellectually honest to espouse that as the one and only option that explains Man's existence. Again, I think evolution 'makes sense,' but I don't necessarily think that it's sermon. What about the flaws of evolution?
1. Evoluion is Missing a Mathematical Forumla -- Math is the verfication language of science, every scientific theory has a formula, except evolution. What is the working formula that shows how evolution exists in practice, or in theory?
2. There is No Genetic Mechanism for Darwinian Evolution -- Apparently we, as humans, evolved from the simplest form of bacterial life. The most basic bacteria has less than 500 genes; man has over 22 thousand. In order for this to occur, there must be a mechanism to be able to add genes. But no such genetic mechanism has been shown to exist (mutations change an existing gene but never add a gene).
3. Evolution is said to have begun by spontaneous generation, a concept ridiculed by biology -- People used to believe that garbage gave rise to rats, and raw meat produced maggots. This now disproven concept was called "spontaneous generation." Louis Pasteur proved that life only comes from life—this is the law of biogenesis. The origin of life is a precussor to evolution, but not required to explain evolution. Scientistis still have not proven how life even started from non-life, which as shown by Pasteur is impossible. But, conveinently, that little fact is not required to explain evolution.
Is it possible that, in the beginning that life was created, in some form, by a higher being and then over millions of years, life evolved through genetic variation and mutation, to create the various forms of life that have existed in the past and currently exist today? Sure, why not?
To say evolution is 100% correct is wrong until one can find all of the missing links in the fossil record and, even more importantly, until one can definitively show how non-life was able to create life.
There's nothing wrong with religion in public schools as long as they are taught from a factual perspective. I'd rather my kids hear the religious gibberish than have them listen to an ultra liberal, card carrying Union member mold their minds into mush. A school should be like the news, a statement of facts...sure bias will exist, but let's stick to the facts.[/QUOTE]
This is an effective argument for removing evolution from the public school curriculum. It does nothing to support teaching creationism in public schools.
