http://www.pewforum.org/2013/12/30/publics-views-on-human-evolution/Less than half of republicans believe evolution, and the number of republicans accepting evolution has actually decreased over the past 3 years. The democrats have risen to 67% almost on par with college educated demographic (still lower than it needs to be). Pretty sad that people, especially the party that controls half the government, is so I'll-informed on this issue.Is there anything that can be done? How has our education failed so badly? How has the media failed so badly? Is there anything that can be done to make republicans smarter? Is this backlash against science progressing to quickly?
12/31/2013 2:33:54 AM
Hmm, similar to the backlash against grammar?
12/31/2013 3:41:24 AM
middle and high school science has failed by not adequately teaching people what theory means and how theory as a scientific term is very different from theory in other uses. if they very clearly explained that a theory can never become a law, it would help a lot.
12/31/2013 9:13:37 AM
religious people are fucking dumb
12/31/2013 9:42:52 AM
12/31/2013 9:44:16 AM
12/31/2013 9:53:31 AM
12/31/2013 9:58:13 AM
all the science in the world won't change a lot of peoples religious beliefs.
12/31/2013 10:14:12 AM
parents are gonna have more of an impact on most kids belief systems and you really arent gonna defeat years of religious garbage with an hour of science 5 times a week.
12/31/2013 10:25:59 AM
There's a growing group of people rejecting partisan politics. I won't pigeonhole this group's beliefs, but the people that are holding onto party ties are, not surprisingly, more stubborn and less likely to adopt new views than their non-partisan peers. Parties are a tribe, and in a tribe it doesn't pay to take an unconventional view. That's my theory, at least.The obvious question is how these non-partisan will engage the electoral system. Do they pick one of the two major party candidates? Do they pick some fringe third party candidate? Do they disengage entirely? The answers matters a little, but they won't change some of the underlying beliefs that enable anti-scientific thinking. It isn't possible to vote this cultural shift into existence.I don't think religion is all to blame, either. The explanation is at least partially political. A lot of bad policy has been crafted in the name of "science", so the reactionary, conservative wing of the GOP digs its heels in and, in some cases, becomes anti-scientific.
12/31/2013 10:31:15 AM
there are also loads of anti-science folks in the democratic party (anti-nuclear/anti-gm crops types), so its not purely religious but its pretty close. regarding where those 3rd parties go, atleast here in maine we elected an independent, former governor to the senate. In the last governors race we almost elected another independent governor, but the democrats ran a total failure that sucked up idiot party ticket voters, so we got a republican. it looks like its gonna happen again this year, so we'll see if the independent can draw more votes away from the republicans. if not, then im sure the current gov will get reelected.
12/31/2013 10:56:15 AM
12/31/2013 11:03:13 AM
yeah that's true. oh god was he so bad. like our current gov is weird too. I like some of his ideas, but others are just retarded. the democratic party in maine is really bad and pretty much only understands how to get out the national talking points, so its hilarious when the gov trolls the shit out of them and they get all flabbergasted cause the only thing they can do is regurgitate more talking points. my biggest worry is that the democrats are gonna run someone slightly more competent than last time which means an even bigger chance to split the vote and the gov is gonna get re-elected.
12/31/2013 11:35:20 AM
12/31/2013 11:51:53 AM
12/31/2013 11:52:10 AM
our last gov was a dude (I live in maine).
12/31/2013 11:52:42 AM
12/31/2013 11:55:49 AM
certainly on the internet there are loads of hugboxes you can goto to reinforce your ideology, but I don't think theres really another equivalent to fox news. Most of the other major news orgs are just incompetent, rather than pandering to a specific belief system[Edited on December 31, 2013 at 12:05 PM. Reason : a]
12/31/2013 12:04:56 PM
but they all perpetuate an equivalency that is not there by giving time to talking heads from both sides of issues when sometimes one side has no merit and deserves no time (e.g. Katie Couric perpetuating the HPV vaccine risk myths)
12/31/2013 12:41:08 PM
12/31/2013 2:46:45 PM
12/31/2013 3:26:46 PM
I think that CNN is a meaningful step less far down the ladder than the other 2, but the format still sucks.
12/31/2013 3:43:43 PM
Cable "news" channels are atrocious pretty much across the board, and may in fact induce vomiting and severe seizures with long term exposure.It's still fascinating that in 2013 it's still misunderstood that the Big Bang Theory (no millenials, not the show with the dumb blonde broad and the nerds) and "evolution" are actually two separate ideas. It's just unfortunate that "evolution" and Big Bang Theory are used interchangeably. The general idea of evolution and creationism aren't even mutually exclusive. Evolution is proven beyond guesses and theories, in that it's actually been observed and documented. The beginning of it all is where the real split is. I believe in creationism's basic tenant that God created everything in the starting palette of the universe. I'm of the thought that even if things originally started with an explosion of sorts as we would describe it (a la Big Bang Theory), it was caused by God and not some random event.I'll be frank - I don't have physical proof of my belief. I can still accept and believe what has been scientifically observed and proven. The two don't actually disprove one another. What people choose to believe about how and why the existence of the universe came into being creates the rift.
12/31/2013 4:21:04 PM
Evolution is proven beyond guesses and theories
12/31/2013 10:32:38 PM
eh okay
12/31/2013 11:01:25 PM
I would caution folks against using the word "proved" in a science discussion if you wish for it to remain legitimate. I am curious if anyone in this thread, reading or posting, doesn't acknowledge the merits of Darwinian and non-Darwinian evolution. If there are, then I whole-heartedly encourage them to go out and use the scientific method to disprove it.
1/1/2014 10:05:32 AM
is it not a proven that evolution takes place?[Edited on January 1, 2014 at 10:31 AM. Reason : ]
1/1/2014 10:30:51 AM
This isn't exclusive to evolution. It's about saying something is ever "proved" in science. Things are only disproven.
1/1/2014 11:15:25 AM
then it was legitimate. carry on.
1/1/2014 12:01:49 PM
"it's just a theory"
1/1/2014 12:22:35 PM
wow it's like Smath74 is a liberal
1/1/2014 1:58:38 PM
what do you mean?
1/1/2014 3:29:42 PM
You understand that saying that evolution is a theory is nothing like saying it's something made up by people who hate God and want to destroy the American family or something like that.
1/1/2014 4:18:36 PM
i don't think that's a liberal thing. more like a reasonable understanding of the nature of science. (and the science definition vs the colloquial definition of "theory")
1/1/2014 4:32:47 PM
haha, but those things are somehow becoming at least a somewhat of a liberal vs conservative thing.
1/1/2014 4:48:28 PM
1/1/2014 6:16:51 PM
1/1/2014 6:27:05 PM
read the first post then come back and roll your eyes again
1/1/2014 6:34:03 PM
1/1/2014 6:51:14 PM
1/1/2014 10:41:39 PM
^yes, private christian schools DO teach creationism as science. One of the (many) reasons i'm against public money going towards vouchers - our tax dollars should not be funding religious education indoctrination. message_topic.aspx?topic=638385I have a buddy (suitemate in wood hall back in the day) who went to a private christian high school in the area and he asked me what evolution even was... they didn't even mention it in science class at the school he went to.[Edited on January 1, 2014 at 10:50 PM. Reason : ]
1/1/2014 10:50:32 PM
Lots of kids, most in fact, eventually drift from their parents. With good education, kids would learn. And it's not like Christian creationism has anywhere near a shred of validity to challenge evolution. The evidence is overwhelming. I recalls AP biology teacher tacitly pushing creationism (2002 era). I guess there's not much you can do about teacher bias, in this social atmosphere. Perhaps if the curriculums were clearer though...?
1/1/2014 10:51:25 PM
1/2/2014 12:29:15 AM
1/2/2014 3:28:56 AM
http://mbd.scout.com/mb.aspx?s=178&f=2531&t=12367512
1/2/2014 3:32:32 AM
I wish that more Muslim schools would come out in support of vouchers, that's all that is needed to kill it
1/2/2014 9:38:14 AM
1/2/2014 12:46:17 PM