Crosscheck wrote:
The people of their community voted them into office, they pulled this stunt and the same community voted them out of office.
Justice ran its course, Supreme court precedent was upheld, no children were taught religion and maybe now the people of Dover think twice before voting for school board members.
I'm not getting too upset.
I'm not anti-religious Cross, I'm anti-fundamentalist, anti-extremist. Believing in a higher power and meddling in public schools are two different things. I can handle them coming round my door peddling their "saving" speech, but I can't accept them causing school boards around the country to pay to defend their science classes from mythology.
Some things here about impact of these idiots on our children and school systems:
Quote:
In August of 1999 the Kansas State Board of Education rejected evolution and the Big Bang theory as scientific principles. The 10-member board voted six to four to eliminate these topics from the science curricula. The Kansas Board did not ban the teaching of evolution or of the Big Bang theory. The Board simply deleted any mention of evolution and the Big Bang theory from the science curriculum and from the materials used to test graduating students. Creationists, such as Board Member Steve Abrams, a former head of the state Republican Party, hailed the decision as a victory in the war against evolutionists. A new Board restored the scientific theories to their previous place in February 2001.
For two years students weren't taught evolution because of "creation scientists"
Quote:
On June 26, 2008, the Louisiana Science Education Act (LSEA) was signed into law by Governor Bobby Jindal. Under the guise of academic freedom, the bill allows local school boards to approve supplemental classroom materials specifically for the critique of scientific theories such as evolution.
The text of the LSEA suggests that it's intended to foster critical thinking, calling on the state Board of Education to "assist teachers, principals, and other school administrators to create and foster an environment within public elementary and secondary schools that promotes critical thinking skills, logical analysis, and open and objective discussion of scientific theories." Unfortunately, it's remarkably selective in its suggestion of topics that need critical thinking, as it cites scientific subjects "including, but not limited to, evolution, the origins of life, global warming, and human cloning."*
It is likely, but not a foregone conclusion, that courts will see through this guise. The purpose is not to encourage critical thinking, as the legislation asserts, but to promote favored ideas
Jindal's antics in Louisiana are pretty concerning to me and the "Academic Freedom" stuff popping up in states is scary.
What I'm saying is that extremist and fundamental groups amongst religions are the issue, that narrow minority, not religion itself nor people of faith. They can believe what they want, it doesn't matter what I think about their bigot and racist ideals, they have that freedom. It's when they take those ideals outside of their private organizations and start attacking secularism and trying to impose their beliefs on the rest of us that I believe we have a right to be upset.