Skip to main content

Isn't childhood indoctrination wonderful?

I happened upon the website for Answers in Genesis this morning and found, under Ken Ham's blog, a lovely post where he has put up the account of a young girl who visited the Creation Museum.

http://blogs.answersingenesis.org/blogs/ken-ham/2011/01/18/a-day-at-the-creation-museum/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+KenHam+(Around+the+World+with+Ken+Ham)

Isn't it great to know that, right now, even as I write this, children are being encouraged to believe that which never was, that which science has continually shown to be untrue? Instead of giving the future of America a first-rate education in the sciences, and the reality of what science is telling us, we get a definite subculture in promoting a delusion, that of a literal, six-day creation.

This child writes of seeing representations of Adam and Eve, of Methuselah, and Noah building the Ark (just how exactly did he fit all of those animals on board...and if the waters covered all the world, does that include Mt. Everest, which means they would all have needed oxygen masks?), of watching videos about the days of creation (and, perhaps, being told that the Grand Canyon is the product of Noah's flood rather than millions of years of natural processes). Her father wrote an addition to the note, saying how wonderful it was that she remembered all of these details months later.

Wonderful, another child potentially "vaccinated" against the reality of evolution. Thank you, Ken Ham. If a person wishes to believe in a six-day creation and Noah's flood (and there are many Christians who believe in neither, literally), then by all means go ahead and accept it as a matter of "faith." But don't pretend that such a belief has any grounding in reality or is supported by any facts. It isn't.

The funny thing about all this is that this nine-year old child was a more coherent writer than Ken Ham!

Comments

  1. Perhaps this child will be one of the fortunate ones who do finally come to their senses and see the mythology for what it is...a total fabrication.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What's really disturbing about this is the long term effects.

    If some one is willfully ignorant, and intelligent (the two can exist together), then all of their intelligence goes to waste. How many great scientists never existed because of places like this? How many advances were lost?

    ReplyDelete
  3. What's frightening is that there is a whole slew of organizations like Ham's that are spreading this junk on a tax free basis with loads of people in the wings working night and day towards the end of destroying science.

    Those trying to teach actual science have their work cut out for them.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

A Film for Our Time

The jurors take a break in 12 Angry Men On the hottest day of the year, the trial of an eighteen year old boy for the murder of his father concludes--the jurors withdraw for deliberations, tasked with determining whether the defendant is guilty. If they agree, a death sentence will be handed down. The case seems an easy one, with the jury ready to reach a verdict in less than five minutes of deliberation, but one juror is not convinced. Over the objections of the others, he demands a recounting of the evidence presented, arguing that surely a man's life is worth more than a few moments' thought. Over the course of several hours, the jurors weigh the evidence of the case, and with it weightier issues of class, justice in the United States, and the intersection of the two. 12 Angry Men  remains relevant to us as we continue to deal with these issues nearly sixty years after the film's release. The great strength of the film lies in the fact that only two of the jur...

Endless Forms Most Bizarre

Anyone who knows me for more than ten minutes knows of my deep and abiding fondness for dinosaurs. It's a holdover from that phase most children go through, re-ignited during a summer class on the extinct beasts during college. Yet the drawback of being an adult who loves dinosaurs is readily apparent when you visit the shelves of your local library or bookstore. Most dinosaur books published are aimed at a far younger audience than myself, and the books for adults are often more technical works. Imagine my delight in seeing the newest book by John Pickrell waiting to be cataloged at my library! I placed a request for the book as quickly as I could pull out my smart phone, and I was not disappointed! Weird Dinosaurs: The Strange New Fossils Challenging Everything We Thought We Knew , is an excellent overview of many of the fascinating and bizarre new discoveries, and rediscoveries, of the past decade. A journalist and editor by trade, Pickrell is passionate about dinosaurs, ...

A Tale of Sound and Fury

Since the week before it was to be published, Michael Wolff's Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House  has been, by far, the most-talked about book in the country. The furor, prompted by an angry denunciation-by-tweet from the President, a cease and desist letter from his lawyers, and salacious details from the book making their way into the press, immediately catapulted it to bestseller status. Being a political junkie, of course I couldn't resist giving it a read. While the book sold out almost immediately in print, I was lucky enough to borrow the digital audiobook from my local public library. I rushed through it in just a few days - not only because of how engrossing it was, but also knowing that there were a lot of people waiting to read it after I was done. As enjoyable a read as Fire and Fury was, the deep irony of the book is that it would likely have received little attention had it not been for the attacks by the Trump Administration. In attempting to st...