It's hard to think when you're not used to it.
The news out of Frankfort, KY is that Park Rangers in the state are increasingly challenged by visitors who had also visited the Creation Museum:
The Creation Museum, which presents the Bible’s creation story as fact supported by science, was opened in late May in Petersburg by the Answers in Genesis Christian ministry.
And there might be millions of years of difference between what a tourist is told one day at the museum and the next day at a state park.
“At places like Cumberland Falls or Natural Bridge — where we’re interpreting geologic history based on the scientific evidence that has been provided — we talk about going back into hundreds of thousands, even millions, of years,” Tichenor said. “The theory of creationism is that the world is only 6,000 years old.”
So, in an effort to better prepare Park Rangers to respond to such challenges, the State of Kentucky is sending 18 park naturalists to the Museum on the taxpayer’s dime. OK - it’s only going to be around $300, but still, that’s $300 dollars collected from Kentucky taxpayers.
I used to live in Kentucky, and I now live in Alabama, but the two states are very similar in this respect: they’re both filled with wonderfully friendly people, many of whom consider themselves over-taxed as it is, and who frequently vote against their own children’s best interests and de-fund educational programs by killing educational taxes in election after election. Now, there’s a proposal to send state workers to what is without any doubt a religious attraction using taxpayer dollars to fund the entire thing.
If I didn’t know any better, and I don’t, I might suggest that this is a blatant case of the State of Kentucky supporting a religious organization.
Whaaa? A museum is a religious organization?
You better believe it. The Answers in Genesis (AiG) ministry spent $27 Million dollars to build the 40,000 square-foot museum in which animatronic dinosaurs provide the foot in the door, and visitors are treated to an evangelical Christian version of natural history, in which children played with dinosaurs, Noah’s Ark apparently cause an extinction event since some animals missed the boat, and “science” is something of a bad word:
The Creation Museum goes far beyond mere science. It doesn’t elevate man’s intellect by using science to “prove” Scripture. Instead, God’s Word is placed first and human reason is last. [ref]
Recently, a BBC camera crew toured the Museum with Evolutionary Biologist Gene Kritsky, from the College of Mount St. Joseph in Delhi Township, and an adjunct curator at the Cincinnati Museum of Natural History. When the camera crew asked him what the Creation Museum was all about, he replied:
“It’s bait-and-switch,” Kritsky would explain moments later, BBC interview concluded. Get them in with dinosaurs, then let the message morph. Adam sins, Noah’s ark arrives.
Then it’s on to more biblical history and on to a subterranean world that is wrought by sin and animated with a basement of lurid graffiti garishly lit that exposes and excoriates abortion, homosexuality, pornography.
Bait-and-switch? That seems plausible, especially considering how impressionable children are, and how they gravitate to cool things like dinosaurs, bugs, sea turtles, and poison dart frogs. And if you’re thinking it’s the AiG crowd isn’t all about hooking your kids, think again as you check out the AiG’s latest website, KidsAnswers.org, where your kids can get this nifty anti-eolution coloring sheet, or find out which day those colorful but deadly frogs were created.
Dr. Kritsky later explained to the camera crew:
“The dinosaurs?” Kritsky continued. “They’re eye candy for kids. A lot of kids get into science because of dinosaurs. I did. For me it was Frito Corn Chips. Seven years old and little dinosaurs were in Frito’s. I asked my mom what was that, and she said, ‘A dinosaur.’ So they’re using dinosaurs as an eye candy.
“At the risk of sounding really mean, it’s almost like intellectual molestation.”
I think that, rather than mean, intellectual molestation sums it up pretty well. So smile, Kentucky Taxpayers, you’re paying your government to send some of your state employees to be intellectually molested. Bless you one and all.
I'm contentedly confident in my abilities and frequent correctness - and this is where you get to bask in my light. Though I'm superior, I'm not complacent. No siree, I spend much of my time trying to understand people, and why some of us are such freaks.
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September 10th, 2007 at 1:11 pm
It’s too bad the media didn’t do a good job showing how stupid the ID’ers are after they lost the Dover trial. It seems people are still somehow entranced by it’s shitty explanations with even shittier science.
Another reason why Science education is so important. People need to stop looking to religion for explanations of the universe.
Herman Cummings
September 10th, 2007 at 10:26 pm
The Book That Embarrasses Theology
A new brand of creationism, which atheists and (other) creationists
are not familiar with is “Biblical Reality”, which is better known as
the “Observations of Moses”.
This “Old Earth” brand of creationism puts forth the view that
combines a seven 24-hr day week of original creation (Exodus 20:11),
with a separate “six 12-hr days of revelation†given to Moses
(Genesis 1:2 – 2:3). The pseudo discrepancy between the “sixth dayâ€
in Genesis chapter one and in chapter two is explained as chapter two
being the beginning of modern mankind (Adam & Eve), and chapter
one as being an earlier species of prehistoric mankind in an earlier
restoration period, more than 60 million years ago.
Biblical Reality is defined as the “ordained marriage” of Biblical
Truth, and Scientific Reality. Think of Biblical Truth as the
“correct†literal interpretation of Scripture, and Scientific Reality
as “That which has been discovered and analyzed to be of true
historical existence. That which has been observed to be a real
occurrence or phenomena, whether or not it can be explained.â€
For example, the discoveries of the extinctions of life on Earth
in what has been determined to be 245 Million BC (dimetrodons)
and 65 Million BC (dinosaurs) is accepted as Scientific Reality.
Biblical Reality teaches that there are no “creation accounts†in
Genesis, and that “Moses Didn’t Write About Creation!â€. What
is actually being said is “Moses wrote about Restorationâ€. Before
the advent of “Biblical Realityâ€, no faction of creationism could
explain both the “first day†of Moses and the “Fourth Dayâ€, all
being 24-hr days, without either denying literal interpretation or
“redefining†the scriptures.
The “six days of Moses†in Genesis chapter one are actually six
consecutive (12 hour) days in 1598 BC that God revealed to Moses
(on Mt. Sinai) from the ancient past. Each day was from the first
week of each of seven different geological eras in “biblical orderâ€.
The only day of Creation Week which Moses saw was the
“Fourth Dayâ€. Creation Week was 168 hours, in 4.6 Billion BC,
according to the geologist.
Title: Moses Didn’t Write About Creation!
Paperback: 432 pages
Publisher: PublishAmerica (August 6, 2007)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1424182204
ISBN-13: 978-1424182206
Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1 inches
Herman Cummings
Ephraim7@aol.com
PO Box 1745
Fortson GA 31808
Smug Baldy
September 11th, 2007 at 1:09 pm
Uh, Herb, what the heck does that have to do with the post?