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The Critic's Resource on AntiEvolution

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/04/03

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear Friends of NCSE,

Plenty of news in Texas again: the Texas state board of education voted to
adopt a flawed set of state science standards, and Chris Comer's suit
against the Texas Education Agency was dismissed. In Florida, the Florida
Academy of Sciences denounced the antievolution bill still in the state
senate. A few seats remain aboard NCSE's next excursion to the Grand
Canyon. And the Evolution Education Update is going to be transferred to
Google Groups in the near future.

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/03/27

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear Friends of NCSE,

Plenty of news in Texas, as the state board of education prepares to
conduct its final vote on the state science standards. New Mexico's
antievolution bill is dead. And NCSE Supporter Stephen G. Brush is to
receive the 2009 Abraham Pais Prize for the History of Physics.

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/03/20

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear Friends of NCSE,

A new antievolution bill in Texas, and plenty of further news from the Lone
Star state, too. Iowa's antievolution bill is dead. And NCSE announces its
very own YouTube channel.

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/03/13

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear Friends of NCSE,

Texas is in the headlines again, with a new bill that appears to be
intended to exempt the Institute for Creation Research's graduate school
from state regulation as well as a profile of Don McLeroy, the avowed
creationist who chairs the state board of education, in the Austin
American-Statesman. Meanwhile, a legislator in Oklahoma, outraged by the
prospect of Richard Dawkins visiting the University of Oklahoma, introduced
two antievolution resolutions -- and Dawkins responded.

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/03/06

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear Friends of NCSE,

A new antievolution bill in Florida. It's the seventh so far in 2009,
joining bills in Alabama, Iowa, Missouri, Mississippi (already dead), New
Mexico, and Oklahoma (already dead). Meanwhile, faculty in Iowa decry the
antievolution bill in their state. And a fresh crop of scientific and
educational journals celebrating the Darwin anniversaries.

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/02/27

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)

Dear Friends of NCSE,

The thousandth signatory to NCSE's Project Steve arrived -- just in time
for the Darwin anniversary celebrations! Plus NCSE is making a sample
chapter from the second edition of Eugenie C. Scott's acclaimed Evolution
vs. Creationism available. And a journal is calling for papers for a
special issue on the teaching of evolution in a university setting.

Rob Pennock on Antievolutionist Bad Behavior

Professor Robert T. Pennock of Michigan State University has an online opinion piece at US News and World Report. The topic? A response and rebuttal of various slurs against Pennock made in that venue by Discovery Institute spokesperson Casey Luskin, plus some very pertinent remarks about the unseemly and violent rhetoric being deployed by the religious antievolution movement.

Wisconsin Citizens for Science

Wisconsin Citizens for Science joins many other Citizens for Science organizations across the country. As a new organization, they need interested Wisconsin citizens to join them to take a stand for the integrity of both science education and our constitution. Please take a moment and register at the website.

NCSE Evolution Education Update for 2009/02/20

(by NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch)


Dear Friends of NCSE,

Louisiana's antievolution law lost the state a major biology
conference. There's good news and bad news on the legislative front, with
a new antievolution bill introduced in Missouri but a similar bill dead in
Oklahoma. NCSE Supporter Kenneth R. Miller is honored by the AAAS. And a
few further noteworthy articles for the Darwin bicentennial.


Antievolutionist Bingo

Skeptico and TechSkeptic came up with a great idea, that of "Creationist Bingo". I'm taking that a step further and automating the creation of "antievolutionist bingo" cards. Each time you bring up this page, you will get a new card.

AntiEvolutionist Bingo
CD014. Isochron dating gives unreliable results.
CE440. Where did space, time, energy, and laws of physics come from?
CA041.1. Federal law (Santorum Amendment) supports teaching alternatives.
CD111. Meteorites are never found in deeper strata.
CI191. Archaeologists and forensic scientists can detect design.
CE310.1. Helmholtz's contraction theory says the sun is young.
CD741. Midocean magnetic anomalies are not reversals.
CH001. Creationism has explanatory power.
CH512.1. Juveniles of large animals were taken aboard.
CC363. Fossilization requires sudden burial.
CB010.1. Even the simplest life is incredibly complex.
CI130. Functional integration indicates design.
References an antievolutionist as an authority
CE261.1. Oort cloud and Kuiper belt are ad hoc fantasies of astronomers.
CB030. Early molecules would have decayed.
CH120. The Bible must be accurate because archaeology supports it.
CB211. An antigen receptor protein structure is same in camels and sharks.
CA622. Without a literal Fall, there is no need for Jesus and redemption.
CC381. There are too few Stone-Age remains for a long history of humanity.
CB701. Haeckel falsified his embryo pictures.
CD620. Average soil depth is consistent with a young earth.
CB901.3. Darwin's finches show only microevolution.
CF003. How could information, such as in DNA, assemble itself?
CD102.1. Out-of-order strata occur at the Lewis Overthrust.
CA114.4. Babbage was a creationist.

Each religious antievolutionist claim on the card links to the mainstream science responses collected by Mark Isaak in his excellent "Index to Creationist Claims". Be sure to check those out.