| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"Fredric L. Rice" |
| Date: |
10 Jul 2005 09:25:40 AM |
| Object: |
Attack of the Christofascists |
THE SCOPES TRIAL AND TODAY'S EVOLUTION BATTLES
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_randolph_050706_the_scopes_trial_and..htm
by Randolph T. Holhut
http://www.opednews.com
DUMMERSTON, Vt. - This month marks the 80th anniversary of what
became known as the Scopes Monkey Trial.
In 1925, John T. Scopes, a high school science teacher in Dayton,
Tenn., was indicted for the crime of teaching the theory of evolution
to his students. Teaching Charles Darwin's "Origin of Species" in
public schools had been made a crime the previous year by the
Tennessee Legislature.
Journalist and author H.L. Mencken convinced the legendary trial
lawyer Clarence Darrow to defend Scopes. Former Democratic presidential
candidate and Christian fundamentalist William Jennings Bryan volunteered
to join the prosecution.
What followed was perhaps the greatest spectacle to have ever taken place
in an American courtroom. For most Americans, the Scopes trial was
the moment when fundamentalism was exposed to the world as being
anti-science,
anti-reason and anti-logic.
Anyone who has read Mencken's now-famous coverage of the trial,
or remembers the dramatization of the trial in the play and film,
"Inherit the Wind," knows how ridiculous it all was. And even
though Scopes was eventually found guilty and fined $100, the
spectacle in Tennessee left fundamentalists as objects of laughter
and ridicule for decades afterward.
However, when one reads about what has been happening around the
country over the past year or so regarding the teaching of evolution in
public schools, it's as if the Scopes trial never happened.
To read what Mencken wrote in the Baltimore Sun on the eve of the
Scopes trial is to see how little has changed in 80 years.
"Every step in human progress, from the first feeble stirrings in the
abyss of time, has been opposed by the great majority of men.
Every valuable thing that has been added to the store of man's possessions
has been derided by them when it was new, and destroyed by them when
they had the power. They have fought every new truth ever heard of,
and they have killed every truth-seeker who got into their hands.
The so-called religious organizations who now lead the war against
the teaching of evolution are nothing more, at bottom, than conspiracies
of the inferior man against his betters."
It's hard to say what's more saddening - that people still behave that
way or that newspapers don't print reporting like that anymore.
I'll leave aside the current fear of newspapers, and how they're
frightened that they might offend someone with a controversial thought.
I'm more interested in Mencken's belief that "the human race is divided
into two sharply differentiated and mutually antagonistic classes ...
a small minority that plays with ideas and is capable of taking them in,
and a vast majority that finds them painful, and is thus arrayed against
them, and against all who have traffic with them."
The "booboisie," as Mencken often called them, have always been with us.
There just seem to be more of them today, and they are no longer
backwoods curiosities, but people in positions of power. These are
people who believe in the superstition of religion and in the literal
truth of the Bible.
Mencken's belief that the vast majority of people find thinking to be
a painful act is borne out by the opinion polls that show about two-thirds
of Americans support teaching creationism and evolution side-by-side in
public schools. Why are other countries overtaking the United States in
science and technology? Might it be because education in this country
is under attack by fundamentalists who want to censor what they don't
agree with and bully teachers into only teaching the Bible's view of
the world?
If you want to believe that God created the world in seven days,
that is your right. However, you don't have the right to force me
or anyone else to believe it. Even if you dress up creationism with
a bit of science and call it "intelligent design," it still is
pushing the Bible's version of events, a version thoroughly and
completely discredited by science.
"Evolution by natural selection, the central concept of the life's
work of Charles Darwin, is a theory," wrote David Quammen, an
award-winning science author, in the November 2004 issue of
National Geographic magazine.
"It's a theory about the origin of adaptation, complexity and diversity
among Earth's living creatures. If you are skeptical by nature,
unfamiliar with the terminology of science and unaware of the
overwhelming evidence, you might even be tempted to say it's 'just'
a theory. In the same sense, relativity as described by Albert Einstein
is 'just' a theory. The notion that Earth orbits around the sun,
rather than vice versa, offered by Copernicus in 1543, is a 'theory' ...
Each of these theories is an explanation that has been confirmed to
such a degree, by observation and experiment, that knowledgeable experts
accept it as fact."
History shows us that when fundamentalism - be it Christian, Islamic,
Judaic or Buddhist - takes hold, stagnation and disaster usually follows.
Religious and political fundamentalism saps a nation's intellectual
vitality and dooms it to backwardness. The yoke of superstition and
ignorance that the fundamentalists are now fitting for our nation
assures us it will happen here also, if we allow them to prevail.
---
http://www.ElmerFudd.US/ http://www.notserver.com/
Scientology crooks: http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
http://PerkinsTragedy.org http://www.rightard.org/
End Republican race hatred: http://www.thedarkwind.org/
.
|
|
| User: "Bill" |
|
| Title: Re: Attack of the Christofascists |
10 Jul 2005 11:19:32 AM |
|
|
A large part of mankind is so terrified by the thought of death and the
unknown that they readily cling to the comfort and pleasantness of an after
life of eternity in a wonderful heaven.
They fight ferociously anyone that endangers this illusion.
"Fredric L. Rice" <FRice@SkepticTank.ORG> wrote in message
news:11d2cig375mjcc8@corp.supernews.com...
THE SCOPES TRIAL AND TODAY'S EVOLUTION BATTLES
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_randolph_050706_the_scopes_trial_and..htm
by Randolph T. Holhut
http://www.opednews.com
DUMMERSTON, Vt. - This month marks the 80th anniversary of what
became known as the Scopes Monkey Trial.
In 1925, John T. Scopes, a high school science teacher in Dayton,
Tenn., was indicted for the crime of teaching the theory of evolution
to his students. Teaching Charles Darwin's "Origin of Species" in
public schools had been made a crime the previous year by the
Tennessee Legislature.
Journalist and author H.L. Mencken convinced the legendary trial
lawyer Clarence Darrow to defend Scopes. Former Democratic presidential
candidate and Christian fundamentalist William Jennings Bryan volunteered
to join the prosecution.
What followed was perhaps the greatest spectacle to have ever taken place
in an American courtroom. For most Americans, the Scopes trial was
the moment when fundamentalism was exposed to the world as being
anti-science,
anti-reason and anti-logic.
Anyone who has read Mencken's now-famous coverage of the trial,
or remembers the dramatization of the trial in the play and film,
"Inherit the Wind," knows how ridiculous it all was. And even
though Scopes was eventually found guilty and fined $100, the
spectacle in Tennessee left fundamentalists as objects of laughter
and ridicule for decades afterward.
However, when one reads about what has been happening around the
country over the past year or so regarding the teaching of evolution in
public schools, it's as if the Scopes trial never happened.
To read what Mencken wrote in the Baltimore Sun on the eve of the
Scopes trial is to see how little has changed in 80 years.
"Every step in human progress, from the first feeble stirrings in the
abyss of time, has been opposed by the great majority of men.
Every valuable thing that has been added to the store of man's possessions
has been derided by them when it was new, and destroyed by them when
they had the power. They have fought every new truth ever heard of,
and they have killed every truth-seeker who got into their hands.
The so-called religious organizations who now lead the war against
the teaching of evolution are nothing more, at bottom, than conspiracies
of the inferior man against his betters."
It's hard to say what's more saddening - that people still behave that
way or that newspapers don't print reporting like that anymore.
I'll leave aside the current fear of newspapers, and how they're
frightened that they might offend someone with a controversial thought.
I'm more interested in Mencken's belief that "the human race is divided
into two sharply differentiated and mutually antagonistic classes ...
a small minority that plays with ideas and is capable of taking them in,
and a vast majority that finds them painful, and is thus arrayed against
them, and against all who have traffic with them."
The "booboisie," as Mencken often called them, have always been with us.
There just seem to be more of them today, and they are no longer
backwoods curiosities, but people in positions of power. These are
people who believe in the superstition of religion and in the literal
truth of the Bible.
Mencken's belief that the vast majority of people find thinking to be
a painful act is borne out by the opinion polls that show about two-thirds
of Americans support teaching creationism and evolution side-by-side in
public schools. Why are other countries overtaking the United States in
science and technology? Might it be because education in this country
is under attack by fundamentalists who want to censor what they don't
agree with and bully teachers into only teaching the Bible's view of
the world?
If you want to believe that God created the world in seven days,
that is your right. However, you don't have the right to force me
or anyone else to believe it. Even if you dress up creationism with
a bit of science and call it "intelligent design," it still is
pushing the Bible's version of events, a version thoroughly and
completely discredited by science.
"Evolution by natural selection, the central concept of the life's
work of Charles Darwin, is a theory," wrote David Quammen, an
award-winning science author, in the November 2004 issue of
National Geographic magazine.
"It's a theory about the origin of adaptation, complexity and diversity
among Earth's living creatures. If you are skeptical by nature,
unfamiliar with the terminology of science and unaware of the
overwhelming evidence, you might even be tempted to say it's 'just'
a theory. In the same sense, relativity as described by Albert Einstein
is 'just' a theory. The notion that Earth orbits around the sun,
rather than vice versa, offered by Copernicus in 1543, is a 'theory' ...
Each of these theories is an explanation that has been confirmed to
such a degree, by observation and experiment, that knowledgeable experts
accept it as fact."
History shows us that when fundamentalism - be it Christian, Islamic,
Judaic or Buddhist - takes hold, stagnation and disaster usually follows.
Religious and political fundamentalism saps a nation's intellectual
vitality and dooms it to backwardness. The yoke of superstition and
ignorance that the fundamentalists are now fitting for our nation
assures us it will happen here also, if we allow them to prevail.
---
http://www.ElmerFudd.US/ http://www.notserver.com/
Scientology crooks: http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
http://PerkinsTragedy.org http://www.rightard.org/
End Republican race hatred: http://www.thedarkwind.org/
.
|
|
|
| User: "Fredric L. Rice" |
|
| Title: Re: Attack of the Christofascists |
11 Jul 2005 10:28:46 PM |
|
|
"Bill" <wmech@bellsouth.net> wrote:
A large part of mankind is so terrified by the thought of death and the
unknown that they readily cling to the comfort and pleasantness of an after
life of eternity in a wonderful heaven.
So they have to attack science as if that'll make it all go away.
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_randolph_050706_the_scopes_trial_and..htm
---
http://www.ElmerFudd.US/ http://www.notserver.com/
Scientology crooks: http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
http://PerkinsTragedy.org http://www.rightard.org/
End Republican race hatred: http://www.thedarkwind.org/
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "leo" |
|
| Title: Re: Attack of the Christofascists |
10 Jul 2005 11:52:52 AM |
|
|
Bill ha escrito:
A large part of mankind is so terrified by the thought of death and the
unknown that they readily cling to the comfort and pleasantness of an after
life of eternity in a wonderful heaven.
They fight ferociously anyone that endangers this illusion.
"Fredric L. Rice" <FRice@SkepticTank.ORG> wrote in message
news:11d2cig375mjcc8@corp.supernews.com...
I don't agree much with this view. I think that the fundies, I mean
the leaders, not necessarily believe all this crap. But they live out
of this. So they are challenging the world, challenging scientist, and
that, trying to keep safe their manger and way of life. So they
don't hesitate to bully any one that cross on his path. So they try
to enslave people to further their flocks. They are shepherds you
know? So anyone that wants to steal their sheep are like rustlers.
That's all.
They cannot forget you for stealing their sheep. But not only this,
they also want to convert you, or better I would say, to revert all of
you into their own sheep. They want to corral you into their pen.
leo
.
|
|
|
|
| User: "goozlefotz" |
|
| Title: Re: Attack of the Christofascists |
10 Jul 2005 12:31:17 PM |
|
|
Bill wrote:
A large part of mankind is so terrified by the thought of death and the
unknown that they readily cling to the comfort and pleasantness of an after
life of eternity in a wonderful heaven.
They fight ferociously anyone that endangers this illusion.
Strangely enough, the fantasy they choose to comfort them about death
makes them more afraid of death.
.
|
|
|
|
|

|
Related Articles |
|
|