livescience.com — One in eight U.S. high school biology teachers presents creationism or intelligent design in a positive light in the classroom, a new survey shows, despite a federal court's recent ban against it. The research also revealed that between 12 percent and 16 percent of the nation's biology teachers are creationists.
May 21, 2008 View in Crawl 4
humanhighlightMay 22, 2008
The worst part is, from the stories they tell, it would appear that the 'invisible friend' is a total assh**e.If I were going to have an invisible friend, I'd at least pick a really cool one, like Kevin Periera
himyMay 24, 2008
I agree - probably more a case for devolution than evolution... things are definitely getting worse, not better, so i agree with your point...
staticthunderMay 24, 2008
Then what is the argument, doofus? If its so good, lay it on us. I'm glad you accept it without question, lets hear it so we can revel in its amazingness.Calling everyone who disagrees an amateur is just so much ad hominem. It doesn't discount the fact that for all you know, the Bible is a fiction made up after the fact, and Christ never lived. You believe otherwise, thats just peachy, but it and all your supposedly well-argued scholars means nothing.
terrible0neMay 26, 2008
So? The point is, people believing in intelligent design are portrayed as ignorant fools, hiding behind blind faith. Do you think this true of a man whose calculations put men on the moon 300 years later. You really think that if a man of Newtons caliber believes so devoutly in something, theres not SOMETHING to it.
enlightenmentJun 12, 2008
God makes you stupid, researchers claim:<a class="user" href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/06/12/god_boffins/">http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/06/12/god_boffin ...</a>
terrible0neAug 26, 2008
point is that not all christians are closed minded back woods hicks. Point is, that if a mind as great as Newton accepted the possibility of intelligent design and a creator, there might be something to it.