blueollie

20 November 2010 Science

Louisiana residents SHOCKED that there is science in science text books!

A group of Louisiana citizens, believed to be backed by the conservative Christian Louisiana Family Forum, are attacking the state’s proposed biology textbooks because, well, they teach too much evolution.

The Baton Rouge Advocate reported this week that a state panel is scheduled to review the issue Friday after the state’s school board held off adopting the biology I and biology II textbooks due to the complaints.

Winston White, one of the residents who complained about the books, said, “It’s like Charles Darwin and his theory is a saint. You can’t touch it.”

It’s worth noting that White is the son of Darrell White, who was one of the Louisiana Family Forum founders. This move is all part of an ongoing broader strategy, one that the LFF, which is affiliated with Focus on the Family, has been behind since the beginning.

Darrell White also told the Advocate that the textbooks don’t comply with the anti-evolution law known as the “Louisiana Science Education Act,” which the Family Forum helped write and successfully lobbied for in 2008. The LSEA instructs educators to promote “critical thinking skills, logical analysis, and open and objective discussion of scientific theories being studied including, but not limited to, evolution, the origins of life, global warming, and human cloning.” It also allows teachers and school districts to use “supplemental textbooks,” which are just code words for creationist and pro-intelligent design materials.

Once again, our stupid “your opinion counts as much as facts” meme rears its ugly head.

Astronomy This exoplanet is unusual in that it orbits a red giant and that the red giant is a star that our Milky Way galaxy took from a nearby dwarf galaxy. Bottom line: swelling to a red giant won’t destroy the planets, though it may well (almost certainly) kill off life on them.

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November 20, 2010 - Posted by | astronomy, creationism, education, evolution, science

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