But there’s still more at AIG’s Creation Museum, as Andy
Mead noted in his
Lexington Herald-Leader article. There’s more
“scientific” absurdities:
The museum
has a planetarium. But its programs, unlike those at other planetariums, will
say that the light from the stars we see did not take millions of years to get
here. …
And there’s even some
“sociological” ones:
There also will be an exhibit
suggesting that belief in evolution is the root of most of modern society’s
evils. It shows models of children leaving a church where the minister believes
in evolution. Soon the girl is on the phone to Planned Parenthood, while the
boy cruises the Internet for pornography sites.
The “root of evil” theme was echoed by the president of
Creation Worldview Ministries, Grady McMirty – “a full-time creation evangelist
who travels the world teaching Christian and secular audiences about the
scientific evidence supporting the biblical view of creationism” – when he
claimed that teaching the reality-based theory of evolution was largely
responsible for the massacre at Virginia Tech. McMirty’s nonsensical rant was
the focus of a
story
carried by One News Now, the reincarnation of
Don Wildmon’s
American Family Association’s
Agape Press
propaganda organ, which is notorious for its own
pathologies.
Let’s be honest. Only someone with a neurological disorder
or a pathological need to promote stupidity and ignorance in the name of a
bible-based, fairy tale worldview would argue for “scientific” answers in Genesis
or that “belief in evolution is the root of most of modern society’s evils.”
When one considers the realities unveiled by quantum mechanics, Einstein’s
relativity and, more recently
membrane theory,
the pathology called “the biblical worldview” and the mental disorder – or more
likely the ulterior motives – of those advocating it become clearer and even
more sinister.
Mr. Ham – whose real-world compensation is reported to be
$120,000 a year – and his profitable non-profit organization want people to
disregard all scientific knowledge and empirical evidence and believe that the
myths in Genesis are literal history. Like Jerry Falwell, they want everyone to
believe “the Bible is the inerrant...word of the living God. It is absolutely
infallible, without error in all matters [including] geography, science,
history.” And, of course, these bible-bleating Christian leaders want the
sheeple to send money to support their “ministries” of stupidity and ignorance…
and the posh lifestyles these spokesmen for “God” enjoy.
Beyond money, there’s power. AIG and its Creation Museum –
affectionately dubbed “The Fred and Wilma Flintstone Museum” by mainstream
scientists – may be quirky media curiosities, but they do help divert attention
from the machinations of their brethren in the
dominionist movement, many of
whom are
also
involved with the
ultra-conservative
star-chamber known as
The
Council for National Policy.
From Chris Hedges’ book
American Fascists: The Christian
Right and the War on America:
Dominionism is a
theocratic sect with its roots in a radical
Calvinism. It looks to the theocracy John
Calvin implanted in Geneva, Switzerland, in the 1500s as its political
model. It teaches that American Christians have been mandated by God top make
America a Christian state. … Dominionism preaches
that Jesus has called on Christians to build the kingdom of God in the here and
now … America becomes, in this militant biblicism, an agent of God, and all
political and intellectual opponents of America’s Christian leaders are view,
quite simply, as agents of Satan. Under Christian dominionism
… the 10 Commandments for the basis of our legal system, creationism and
“Christian values” form the basis of our educational system, and the media
and the government proclaim the Good News to one and all. Labor unions,
civil-rights laws and public schools will be abolished. [links and italics
added; the three “dominionism” links are to different reference sources]
Theocracy Watch
offers extensive information about dominionism, its history and its advocates.
The links in this excerpt provide a summary:
The theocratic right seeks to
establish dominion,
or control over society in the name of God. D.
James Kennedy, Pastor of Coral Ridge Ministries, calls on his followers to
exercise “godly dominion ... over every aspect ... of human society.”
At a “Reclaiming America for
Christ” conference in February, 2005, Kennedy said:
“Our job is to reclaim
America for Christ, whatever the cost. As the vice regents of God, we are to
exercise godly dominion and influence over our neighborhoods, our schools, our
government, our literature and arts, our sports arenas, our entertainment
media, our news media, our scientific endeavors – in short, over every aspect
and institution of human society.”
The names and organizations of the Christian Right’s leading
dominionists are well known: James Dobson and Focus on the Family, Tony Perkins
and the Family Research Council, Louis Sheldon and the Traditional Values
Coalition, Don Wildmon and the American Family Association. But there are less
well-known ones who exert considerable influence. The Southern Poverty Law
Center just put together
mini-profiles
of some of them in the African-American community. How odd that those who were
once subjected to slavery and horrific discrimination by those advocating a
previous version of “the biblical worldview” would now use the same tactics to
engender hate and oppress others:
Bishop Wellington Boone
[of] Norcross, Ga. A spokesman for the patriarchal and largely
white Promise Keepers evangelical men’s movement, sidekick to Focus on the
Family leader James Dobson and a popular guest on the “700 Club” hosted by Pat
Robertson and his Christian Broadcasting Network, Bishop Wellington Boone
preaches that homosexuality unchecked “will result in the ultimate destruction
of society.”
Boone is a strict Christian
“dominionist” who advocates replacing constitutional democracy with Biblical
law. …
Rev. Keith Butler [of]
Detroit, Mich. The Rev. Keith Butler is the pastor of Word of Faith
International Christian Center, which has more than 22,000 members. Called “one
of the Detroit area's most outspoken opponents of homosexuality” by the
Detroit
Metro Times, Butler wrote in a 2003
Detroit Free Press editorial
that “the gay lifestyle is based on a behavior choice that endangers family,
children, and the core of society. … The attempt to push this decadent
lifestyle into mainstream society … is simply wrong.”
Ironically, Butler’s church has
produced several gay pastors, such as the Rev. James Karl Jackson of Detroit.
A Republican since 1980, Butler
served one term on the Detroit City Council before running for the U.S. Senate
last fall. He said God handpicked him to clear out Democrats, who are “on the
wrong side of Judeo-Christian issues.”
Science is the primary target of creationists. Gay Americans
and civil equality are among the main targets of dominionists. Both groups are
predominately Republican. As Andy Mead noted in his article about AIG’s
Creation Museum,
When the Gallup Poll asked people
about their views on the subject [of human origins] in March, 47 percent of the
Americans polled said that God created humans pretty much in their present form
some time in the last 10,000 years. That belief was strongest among those
with
less education, regular churchgoers, people 65 and older,
and
Republicans [italics added].
Ultra-conservative Republicans and bible-thumping
dominionists are beyond the reach of reason and rationality. Not surprisingly,
education is their archenemy. Perhaps that’s why they’re among the chief
supporters of creation museums. (Others are being built in Arkansas, Texas,
California, and Florida.) They need to corrupt the minds of the young to make
sure the future moves backwards. And what better way to do that than with animated
fairy tales masquerading as education. From Andy Mead’s article:
But Eugenie Scott, a former
University of Kentucky anthropologist who is director of the California-based
National Center for Science Education, said the information provided in the
[AIG creation] museum “is not even close to standard science.”
Scott visited the museum recently
as part of a British Broadcasting Corp. radio program. Although she didn't get
a tour, she saw enough to know that the museum will be professionally done.
And, she says, that's worrisome.
“There are going to be students
coming into the [science] classroom and saying, ‘I just went to this fancy
museum and everything you’re telling me is rubbish,’” Scott said.
Bill Maher was right, sort of. A neurological disorder is
something one does not choose to have. But
choosing to twist and warp
education in order to advance ignorance and stupidity defines pathology.
Choosing
to twist and warp religion in order to advocate discrimination and hate and
conjure a theofascist state defines pathology.