M
mikeemmert
Guest
That starts today (Sunday 1-8-06) in Washington, DC: <br /><br />http://www.aas.org/<br /><br />First up: The AAS Statement on the Teaching of Evolution. That's above the statement on the Vision for Space Exploration, the statement on the NSF's Division of Astronomical Sciences Senior Review, several Hubble announcements...they are also forced to announce a statement endorsing the American Geophysical Union's Statement on Climate Change.<br /><br />So the AAS has seen that creationism and ID is an attack on all science. That's true. If you believe the Earth is flat and the sky is 6000 years old, then you'll believe anything.<br /><br />I'll admit, the rise of fundamentalism took me by surprise. I should have known. I got into a minor short-lived debate with a leading Secular Humanist about the date the religious right launched it's attack on intelligence and we quickly agreed that it was a little ambiguous but sometime around 1979 / 1982. My source was Time magazine, he had other sources.<br /><br />They've been working on this for some time, hiding their agenda and spreading their "vision" through church contacts and by word of mouth. Inefficient, but effective over a long period. This was the "vast right wing conspiracy" Hillary was talking about. I'll be honest...I didn't take it seriously enough. Science is in trouble.<br /><br />Anyway, a bunch of time is going to be wasted having to answer these people. I was hoping it would be like previous years, with all kinds of exciting announcements coming out. I am hoping the neccessary political commentary won't drown out the announcement of Xena's mass, which has been creating white-knuckle suspense for me.<br /><br />The political stuff is annoying static, but it has to be done.