Intelligent design and its Republican supporters

Remember the Republican presidential candidates — Mike Huckabee, Sam Brownback and others — who pandered to the religious right last year by saying schools should teach intelligent design, a pseudoscience based on the biblical version of creation?

Now that scientists have identified the remains of one of their 4 million-year-old relatives in Ethiopia, it will be interesting to see if the next crop of candidates is as enthusiastic about supporting this fake scientific alternative to evolution. My guess is that many of them will.

Our new found ancestor is known as Ardi. She was 4 feet tall, weighed 110 pounds, had short legs, long arms and spent most of her time in trees. But when she hit the ground, she was able to stand on her own two feet and walk upright, though not quite as well as Sarah Palin, Tim Pawlenty or Bobby Jindal.

u      u      u

I single out these three particular descendants of the 4.4 million-year-old skeleton excavated from the Ethiopian desert for a reason. They are potential 2012 presidential candidates who still claim that the version of creationism known as intelligent design is a theory as legitimate as evolution, even though evolution is beyond scientific dispute.

Ardi is an ancestor of both humans and chimpanzees and is a link to the yet-to-be-found remains of a common ancestor to both, believed to be at least 2 million years older than Ardi. The “last common ancestor,†as this fossil is known, will also probably be found in Ethiopia, which is now recognized by many scientists as the cradle of humankind, thanks to the discovery there of Ardi and bones from 35 of her friends and family as well as Lucy, a 3 million-year-old descendant discovered in the same area earlier.

u      u      u

But this immense scientific breakthrough will not deter millions of Americans from persisting in their belief that the biblical accounts of creation are literally true, along with Jonah in the whale and Noah in the ark.

This belief is especially popular among Republicans, according to Gallup polls that have been conducted on the subject for more than 25 years. Last year, Gallup found belief in the creation myth — that God created the earth 10,000 years ago and populated it with human beings just as they are today — is endorsed by 60 percent of voters who identify themselves as Republicans. This belief is shared by 40 percent of those who say they’re independent voters and 38 percent who call themselves Democrats.

The Republican 60 percent resides comfortably in the party’s far right base, along with the birthers, the Limbaugh listeners, the gun nuts and the disappointed advocates of anti-abortion, school prayer, flag-burning and other conservative crowd-pleasing amendments to the Constitution that will never happen. But it is important for Republican candidates to keep them interested.

u      u      u

That may be why Jindal, the governor of Louisiana and a biology major at Brown, for crying out loud, has pushed through a law in Louisiana that gets around a Supreme Court decision that declared the teaching of creationism in the public schools unconstitutional.

Palin’s views are similar. She points out her father was a high school science teacher who taught “both sides†in their home and she respects Darwin, but she respects local schools determining their own curriculums even more. Minnesota Gov. Pawlenty sees creationism as “plausible and credible and something that I personally believe in†and he, too, is in favor of letting the kids decide for themselves after being exposed to the falsehood that evolution and creationism are separate but equal theories.

Another Republican considered presidential timber before he evolved from monogamy, South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, also questioned evolution and had some pseudoscience to prove it.

“I think there are real chinks in the armor of evolution being the only way we came about,†Sanford told an interviewer. “The idea of there being a little mud hole and two mosquitoes get together and the next thing you know you have a human being is completely at odds with, you know, one of the laws of thermodynamics.â€

We can be thankful his other interests have undermined his presidential ambitions.

John McCain was an unapologetic Darwinian, but the president he hoped to succeed, George W. Bush, said he believed in the “both sides ought to be properly taught argument,†although he didn’t say so publicly until after his election to his second term.

At the time, Congressman Barney Frank called Bush’s statement “further indication that a fundamentalist right has really taken over much of the Republican Party.â€

Sixty percent of the Republican Party, to be precise.

 

Dick Ahles is a retired journalist from Simsbury. E-mail him at dahles@hotmail.com.

Latest News

Walking among the ‘Herd’

Michel Negroponte

Betti Franceschi

"Herd,” a film by Michel Negroponte, will be screening at The Norfolk Library on Saturday April 13 at 5:30 p.m. This mesmerizing documentary investigates the relationship between humans and other sentient beings by following a herd of shaggy Belted Galloway cattle through a little more than a year of their lives.

Negroponte and his wife have had a second home just outside of Livingston Manor, in the southwest corner of the Catskills, for many years. Like many during the pandemic, they moved up north for what they thought would be a few weeks, and now seldom return to their city dwelling. Adjacent to their property is a privately owned farm and when a herd of Belted Galloways arrived, Negroponte realized the subject of his new film.

Keep ReadingShow less
Fresh perspectives in Norfolk Library film series

Diego Ongaro

Photo submitted

Parisian filmmaker Diego Ongaro, who has been living in Norfolk for the past 20 years, has composed a collection of films for viewing based on his unique taste.

The series, titled “Visions of Europe,” began over the winter at the Norfolk Library with a focus on under-the-radar contemporary films with unique voices, highlighting the creative richness and vitality of the European film landscape.

Keep ReadingShow less
New ground to cover and plenty of groundcover

Young native pachysandra from Lindera Nursery shows a variety of color and delicate flowers.

Dee Salomon

It is still too early to sow seeds outside, except for peas, both the edible and floral kind. I have transplanted a few shrubs and a dogwood tree that was root pruned in the fall. I have also moved a few hellebores that seeded in the near woods back into their garden beds near the house; they seem not to mind the few frosty mornings we have recently had. In years past I would have been cleaning up the plant beds but I now know better and will wait at least six weeks more. I have instead found the most perfect time-consuming activity for early spring: teasing out Vinca minor, also known as periwinkle and myrtle, from the ground in places it was never meant to be.

Planting the stuff in the first place is my biggest ever garden regret. It was recommended to me as a groundcover that would hold together a hillside, bare after a removal of invasive plants save for a dozen or so trees. And here we are, twelve years later; there is vinca everywhere. It blankets the hillside and has crept over the top into the woods. It has made its way left and right. I am convinced that vinca is the plastic of the plant world. The stuff won’t die. (The name Vinca comes from the Latin ‘vincire’ which means ‘to bind or fetter.’) Last year I pulled a bunch and left it strewn on the roof of the root cellar for 6 months and the leaves were still green.

Keep ReadingShow less
Matza Lasagne by 'The Cook and the Rabbi'

Culinary craftsmanship intersects with spiritual insights in the wonderfully collaborative book, “The Cook and the Rabbi.” On April 14 at Oblong Books in Rhinebeck (6422 Montgomery Street), the cook, Susan Simon, and the rabbi, Zoe B. Zak, will lead a conversation about food, tradition, holidays, resilience and what to cook this Passover.

Passover, marked by the traditional seder meal, holds profound significance within Jewish culture and for many carries extra meaning this year at a time of great conflict. The word seder, meaning “order” in Hebrew, unfolds in a 15-step progression intertwining prayers, blessings, stories, and songs that narrate the ancient saga of the liberation of the Israelites from slavery. It’s a narrative that has endured for over two millennia, evolving with time yet retaining its essence, a theme echoed beautifully in “The Cook and the Rabbi.”

Keep ReadingShow less