Senior McCain advisor helped arrange Rev. Moon coronation

Charlie Black, a senior advisor to the McCain campaign, lent his name to and helped arrange the bizarre March 23, 2004 event on Capitol Hill in which Rev. Sun Myung Moon was crowned King of America and declared himself to be the Messiah. Rev. Moon is a very powerful, wealthy man who has been regularly supported at public events by people such as former President George H. W. Bush and evangelical Christians like Tim and Beverly LaHaye (he helped found the Institute for Creation Research through his Christian Heritage College, co-author of Left Behind; she is the head of Concerned Women for America) and Jerry Falwell. Jonathan Wells of the Discovery Institute is a member of Moon’s Unification Church, which makes DI another organization where evangelical Christians join hands with members of Moon’s cult. Most of these people probably don’t agree with Moon’s nonsense, but they like his money and aren’t above prostituting themselves in order to receive some of it. UPDATE (May 13, 2008): More on Charlie Black, from FiretheLobbyists.com: Charlie Black, McCain’s senior counsel and spokesman, began his lobbying career by representing numerous dictators and repressive regimes ...

May 12, 2008 · 2 min

Ken Miller op-ed on "Expelled"

Brown University biology professor, textbook author, and Catholic Ken Miller has written an op-ed about “Expelled."

May 8, 2008 · 1 min

Michael Behe: Expelled from Expelled

Intelligent design advocate Michael Behe was interviewed for the film “Expelled,” and even included in one of the trailer previews, but does not appear in the final film, even though he has been one of the most prominent ID advocates. Why not? There are several likely explanations: 1. He is a counter-example to the claim that intelligent design advocates are being persecuted by academia. He is an intelligent design advocate who is also a professor at Lehigh University. (Point due to Tegamai Bopsulai.) 2. He has become something of a heretic in intelligent design circles as a result of his latest book, The Edge of Evolution, in which he affirms common ancestry, he calls using the Bible as a science textbook “silly,” he doesn’t think intelligent design is necessary to explain lower taxonomic levels of life such as species, genera, families, and orders, and he doesn’t see the need for continued miraculous interventions into the process of evolution by God. (Points due to Larry Arnhart.) 3. His latest book conflicts with the idea of The Fall when he argues that malaria was intentionally designed to kill people. (Where’s Ben Stein on this one? Point due to RBH.) It appears that ID’s big tent has become too small to allow Michael Behe to remain inside. Via: Larry Arnhart at Darwinian Conservatism Brian Switek at Laelaps John Lynch at Stranger Fruit ...

May 2, 2008 · 2 min

History and future of the Discovery Institute

Ross Anderson, journalist and former Senior Fellow of the Discovery Institute, gives an interesting history of the founding of the organization. He describes how DI got into the intelligent design business, which has proved to be its major source of funding. About two years ago, the Discovery Institute founded the Biologic Institute to perform scientific research. At long last, they finally have a website up, and its cast of characters contains many names recognizable from the film “Expelled.” Still no scientific theory of intelligent design, however.

April 30, 2008 · 1 min

National Review on "Expelled"

John Derbyshire of National Review has written about “Expelled." A couple of key paragraphs: I think this willful act of deception has corrupted creationism irredeemably. The old Biblical creationists were, in my opinion, wrong-headed, but they were mostly honest people. The “intelligent design” crowd lean more in the other direction. Hence the dishonesty and sheer nastiness, even down to plain bad manners, that you keep encountering in ID circles. It’s by no means all of them, but it’s enough to corrupt and poison the creationist enterprise, which might otherwise have added something worthwhile to our national life, if only by way of entertainment value. … And now here is Ben Stein, sneering and scoffing at Darwin, a man who spent decades observing and pondering the natural world — that world Stein glimpses through the window of his automobile now and then, when he’s not chattering into his cell phone. Stein claims to be doing it in the name of an alternative theory of the origin of species: Yet no such alternative theory has ever been presented, nor is one presented in the movie, nor even hinted at. There is only a gaggle of fools and fraudsters, gaping and pointing like Apaches on seeing their first locomotive: “Look! It moves! There must be a ghost inside making it move!” Quite right. There is no scientific theory of intelligent design. UPDATE (May 1, 2008): Commenter tom points out a subsequent Derbyshire post about Ben Stein’s remarkable statement on the Trinity Broadcasting Network that while “Love of God and compassion and empathy leads you to a very glorious place … science leads you to killing people." Ben Stein is a shameful, despicable human being. ...

April 29, 2008 · 2 min

Mathematical misunderstanding by Marks and O'Leary

Jeff Shallit has a post at his Recursivity blog about some “comical misunderstandings” by intelligent design advocates Denyse O’Leary and Robert Marks. In O’Leary’s case, the misunderstanding is expected, but Marks is an engineering professor at Baylor University who should know better.

April 27, 2008 · 1 min

David Berlinski, King of Poseurs

Jeff Shallit talks about Discovery Institute Fellow David Berlinski, notable as one of the few advocates of intelligent design who is not an evangelical Christian. He’s also not a scientist or a mathematician; he has a Ph.D. in philosophy from Princeton. Although that’s a top school for philosophy in the U.S., Berlinski hasn’t been working as a professional philosopher, either. Of course, he was touted as an expert in “Expelled.”

April 27, 2008 · 1 min

"Expelled" reviewed from a filmmaker's perspective

At the Evolved and Rational blog, John Ray gives a review of “Expelled” from a filmmaking perspective: Cinematically, Expelled gets off to a lovely start. First-time director Nathan Frankowski chooses a nice, rich level of contrast and uses it to create some sparkling opening shots of our nation’s capitol. Those who knew what they were in for when they walked into the theater (presumably, most of the film’s so-far few attendees) were given an artistic visual rough outline of where the film was going. By the time we see Ben Stein taking a deep breath, looking indeed like “the little investigative journalist that could” in his trademark adorable little sneakers, the audience is practically eager to believe whatever he has to say. ...

April 27, 2008 · 1 min

Ben Stein lies about Sternberg affair

In an interview with Newsweek, Ben Stein falsely stated that: There are a number of scientists and academics who’ve been fired, denied tenure, lost tenure or lost grants because they even suggested the possibility of intelligent design. The most egregious is Richard Sternberg at the Smithsonian, the editor of a magazine that published a peer-reviewed paper about ID. He lost his job.Sternberg was never employed by the Smithsonian and never lost his unpaid Research Associate position there. He never worked for any Smithsonian magazine, and resigned from his position as editor of The Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington six months before the publication of the Stephen Meyer intelligent design article which he approved with inappropriate review. The Smithsonian responded to Newsweek: Sternberg has never been employed by the Smithsonian Institution. Since January 2004, he has been an unpaid research associate in the departments of invertebrate and vertebrate zoology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. Dr. Sternberg continues to enjoy full access to research facilities at the museum. Moreover, Stein’s assertion that Sternberg was removed from a Smithsonian publication is not true. The Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington is an independent journal and is not affiliated with the Smithsonian.(Via Dispatches from the Culture Wars.)

April 25, 2008 · 1 min

"Expelled" promotes young-earth creationist materials

Commenters “paul” and Jay Rogers claimed here that “Expelled” “is not a Christian movie." Yet Troy Britain points out that the “leadership guide” distributed at the “Expelled” website is filled with statements which closely resemble quotations from young-earth creationist literature published by the Institute for Creation Research, an explicitly Christian organization. UPDATE (April 25, 2008): If “Expelled” isn’t a Christian movie, why does the “Expelled: The Movement” website look like a Christian website–promoting Christian bands, Christian magazines, and Christian books by apologists like Lee Strobel, as well as young-earth creationism-promoting ministries like Coral Ridge Ministries (of the late D. James Kennedy, one of the most dishonest purveyors of bogus young-earth creationist arguments who has lived on this planet)?

April 23, 2008 · 1 min
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