I found this artical interesting. http://www.creationontheweb.com/content/view/5626
also see the trailer at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGCxbhGaVfE
Expelled: New movie exposes persecution of anti-Darwinists
by Andrew Halloway
Last
October, in a move that revived memories of Stalinistic censorship, the
Council of Europe voted to encourage member countries to ban the
teaching of creationism as a scientific discipline. The Council’s
Parliamentary Assembly declared: ‘If we are not careful, creationism
could become a threat to human rights.’ In stark contrast, the reality
on academic campuses around the world is that evolutionary orthodoxy is
already threatening human rights, as a new movie is about to show. This
major feature film, revealing the academic censorship of intelligent
design theory, is to be released in the Northern Hemisphere spring of
2008.
The controversial movie, Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, is
a documentary in the style of Fahrenheit 9/11 and An Inconvenient Truth.
It
will expose how the Darwinist hierarchy has closed ranks against the
rise of intelligent design, a theory that opposes evolution and says
that a Designer is responsible for life. Some leading scientists have
lost their jobs for expressing dissident views on the origins of life.
Far
from science being a free and open exploration of the truth, the film
shows that in this particular field it is a closed book.
Expelled
uncovers the persecution of educators and scientists who are being
denied tenure, and even fired in some cases, for their belief in the
evidence for design in nature, challenging the idea that life is a
result of random chance and evolution.
The movie is made with the
2008 American elections in mind, and intelligent design vs evolution
has already become an issue—with candidates taking sides. It is the
brainchild of software developer Walt Ruloff, who has also funded the
movie. He made his fortune by selling his software to Microsoft in the
early 1990s. Then he discovered the intelligent design controversy. He
says he was stunned ‘both by the arrogance and brutality of the
Darwinist establishment, and the lack of solid scientific evidence for
their views.’
The film has already received endorsements from
high-profile Christian figures like Luis Palau, Charles Colson, Michael
Medved and J.I. Packer. The filmmakers, Premise Media, plan to use
viral marketing to ensure that Expelled reaches students. The campaign
is directed by Motive Entertainment, the company behind the grass roots
promotions for Hollywood blockbusters such as The Passion of the Christ
and The Chronicles of Narnia.
Unlike many documentaries, Expelled
doesn’t just talk to people representing one side of the story. The
film confronts evolutionists such as Richard Dawkins, author of The God
Delusion, influential biologist and atheist blogger PZ Myers, and
Eugenie Scott, head of the anti-creationist lobby group, National
Center for Science Education. The creators of Expelled crossed the
globe over a two-year period, interviewing scores of scientists,
doctors, philosophers and public leaders. The result is a startling
revelation of the way in which freedom of thought and freedom of
inquiry have been expelled from high schools, universities and research
institutions.
Photo
The star of the
film is Hollywood actor Ben Stein, who is also a lawyer, an economist,
a former presidential speechwriter, author and social commentator. In
the film, he discovers biologists, astronomers, chemists and
philosophers who have had their reputations destroyed and their careers
ruined by a scientific establishment that allows absolutely no dissent
from Charles Darwin’s theory of random mutation and natural selection.
For
example, Stein meets Richard Sternberg, a double Ph.D. biologist who
allowed a peer-reviewed research paper describing the evidence for
intelligence in the universe to be published in the scientific journal
Proceedings. Not long after publication, officials from the National
Center for Science Education and the Smithsonian Institution, where
Sternberg was a research fellow, began a coordinated smear and
intimidation campaign to get the promising young scientist expelled
from his position. This attack on scientific freedom was so egregious
that it prompted a congressional investigation. See The Smithsonian/Sternberg controversy.
Stein
also meets astrophysicist Guillermo Gonzalez, who was denied tenure at
Iowa State University in spite of his extraordinary record of
achievement. Gonzalez made the mistake of documenting the design he has
observed in the universe. See Darwinian thought police strike again.
There is also Caroline Crocker, a brilliant biology teacher at George
Mason University who was forced out of the university for briefly
discussing problems with Darwinian theory, and for telling the students
that some scientists believe there is evidence of design in the
universe. The list goes on and on.
Scientists are supposed to be
allowed to follow the evidence wherever it may lead, no matter what the
implications are.—Ben Stein, star of Expelled.
‘Big Science in this
area of biology has lost its way,’ says Stein. ‘Scientists are supposed
to be allowed to follow the evidence wherever it may lead, no matter
what the implications are. Freedom of inquiry has been greatly
compromised, and this is not only anti-American, it’s anti-science.
It’s anti-the whole concept of learning.’
Walt Ruloff, Co-Executive
Producer, says, ‘The incredible thing about Expelled is that we don’t
resort to manipulating our interviews for the purpose of achieving the
“shock effect,” something that has become common in documentary film
these days.
‘Premise Media took on this difficult mission because we
believe the greatest asset of humanity is our freedom to explore and
discover truth.’
Even since the film was made, another case of
censorship in American universities has come to light. In September,
Baylor University took offline the Evolutionary Informatics Laboratory
website that had been administered by Robert Marks, Distinguished
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Baylor, because the
administration claimed there were anonymous complaints linking the lab
to intelligent design.
This is the third instance in which Baylor
University has restricted free speech and punished a faculty member
because of their views on intelligent design. In 2000, the University
administration caved in to pressure from Darwinian activists demanding
they shut down the Michael Polanyi Research Center, established in part
to do research on intelligent design theory. In 2006, legal scholar
Francis Beckwith was denied tenure by Baylor administrators in part
because of his writings supporting the constitutionality of teaching
intelligent design. The Board of Regents reversed that decision and
Beckwith was granted tenure, but only after a long public battle.
Casey
Luskin, a spokesman for Discovery Institute, America’s leading think
tank on intelligent design, says: ‘There is a troubling pattern of
scientists and scholars at Baylor University coming under attack for
questioning evolution. The freedom of scientists, teachers and students
to question Darwin is coming under increasing attack by people that can
only be called Darwinian fundamentalists. ‘What has happened to
Professor Marks is censorship, pure and simple.’ (See also US Congressional leader castigated for creation comments.)
Dr
Marks has gone the extra mile in trying to accommodate any legitimate
concerns Baylor administrators may have had about his evolutionary
informatics website, even agreeing to put a disclaimer on the site
making clear that it represented his views as a faculty member, not the
university as a whole. But Baylor administrators have now spurned
Marks’ efforts to accommodate them, apparently reneging on a compromise
brokered by Marks’ attorney.
But scientists who support intelligent
design shouldn’t be surprised at their predicament. Before the
particular subset of anti-Darwinism known as ‘intelligent design’
arrived on the scene, creationist scientists had been systematically
persecuted for decades, and still are today. For example, when Dr
Marcus Ross, a young palaeontologist at the University of Rhode Island,
submitted his doctoral thesis on mosasaurs—giant extinct marine
reptiles—he was ‘outed’ as a young-Earth creationist. The revelation,
in The New York Times, sparked an impassioned debate about whether his
views should preclude him from his chosen profession. (Dr Ross was
interviewed in CMI’s Creation magazine in December 2007.)
The fact
that he is a brilliant scientist, whose research is described by
colleagues as impeccable, seemed irrelevant to the orthodox Darwinists,
who called for him to be sacked simply because he expresses different
scientific views to theirs.
Eugenie Scott, executive director of the
US National Centre for Science Education, favoured a hard line against
Dr Ross because of the suspicion that he would use his doctorate ‘to
miseducate the public’.
Is academic censorship also taking place in
the UK? If anything, it’s probably worse on Darwin’s home patch. Mark
Pickering, head of student ministries at the Christian Medical
Fellowship, says that there is systematic bias in the scientific world
against intelligent design: ‘I have academic colleagues who do not yet
have tenure who cannot own up to their professors that they have
sympathy with intelligent design because that would be the end of their
career. This is despite them already proving themselves as good
scientists’ (Student British Medical Journal, June 07).
In December
2006, The Guardian reported that an influential group of academics were
demanding a change in the law to ensure UK scholars are given complete
freedom of speech in universities. More than 60 educators from
Academics for Academic Freedom called for laws to be extended to ensure
that academics are free to ‘question and test received wisdom, and to
put forward unpopular opinions’.
In today’s political climate it is harder than ever for academics to defend open debate.—Academics for Academic Freedom
A statement on the AFAF website says:
‘In
today’s political climate it is harder than ever for academics to
defend open debate. Restrictive legislation, and the bureaucratic rules
and regulations of government quangos and of universities themselves,
have undermined academic freedom.
‘Many academics are fearful of
upsetting managers and politicians by expressing controversial
opinions. Afraid to challenge mainstream thought, many pursue
self-censorship.’
The very fact that such a campaign is necessary
seems to prove that free debate and research in the UK are under
threat. Richard Dawkins has publicly called for Andy McIntosh, Professor of Thermodynamics at Leeds, to be sacked simply for claiming evolutionary theory is wrong.
Howard
Taylor, chaplain at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, says: ‘At
Caltech University in Los Angeles, a lecturer has complained that the
scientific hierarchy is behaving like the “mother church” of the Middle
Ages and intimidating those of a different view.’
While the lecturer
was talking about scientific dissent on global warming, it appears that
the comparison is just as applicable to evolution. It seems the
scientific establishment has nullified the Royal Society’s motto:
‘Nullius in verba’1 , which refers to open, unprejudiced, uninhibited inquiry and unstifled debate.
References
Latin for ‘On the word of no-one’. Return to text.
Published: 20 February 2008(GMT+10)
Thursday, 14 February 2008
Expelled: New movie exposes persecution of anti-Darwinists
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