Gypsys Kiss wrote:Player, you stick to your guns, girl.
Righto Player, you stick to your guns
....and keep telling yourself your a Christian while receiving the support of CC's atheists
Moderator: Community Team
Gypsys Kiss wrote:Player, you stick to your guns, girl.
DangerBoy wrote:Gypsys Kiss wrote:Player, you stick to your guns, girl.
Righto Player, you stick to your guns
....and keep telling yourself your a Christian while receiving the support of CC's atheists

silvanricky wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:And, no, I won't "give it a rest" because the destruction to scientific knowledge that creationist represent is probably more harmful to not just this country, but the world than Al Qaeda terrorists ever could be, (except that they perpetuate similar misguided information).
That's a pretty shitty thing to say player and was totally unnecessary
Seriously, that's messed up. Creationists are as bad as Al Qaeda?!! WTF
PLAYER57832 wrote:Those are precisely the conditions that make people go from saying "we don't like those people, disagree with their way of life, but as long as they leave us alone, we will leave them be" and into "they are the enemy and must be killed!".
Spazz Arcane wrote:If birds could swim and fish could fly I would awaken in the morning to the sturgeons cry. If fish could fly and birds could swim I'd still use worms to fish for them.
saxitoxin wrote:I'm on Team GabonX
Smart, yes. Educated in biology, geology and the science behind evolution, no.bradleybadly wrote:Your bitter obsession on this is unsettling, to say the least. There are plenty of smart people who don't buy into the evolutionary model.
bradleybadly wrote:My parents and wife are some of them. I grew up being told that the creation story was accurate, but was later able to make up my own mind. Students are a lot smarter than you give them credit for and we can have the confidence that if both views are taught, people can decide for themselves.
They ARE those, but most particularly some of the teachers at my son's school. That is just not OK in 2010. There is way too much evidence both in support of evolution AND disproving young earth creationism. Fruthermore, we depend too much on having an educated future generation to allow our kids to be so taught.bradleybadly wrote: Creationists could be your bank managers, teachers, firemen, doctors, child care workers, or anyone else in your community.
Belief is fine. Failure to acknowledge scientific proof, failure to understand what constitutes scientific proof disqualify someone from being an effective teacher, or making effective decisions regarding our environment.bradleybadly wrote:Creationists, although wrong, are no more under qualified to do or run anything in life than you. It's the height of arrogance for you to suggest that unless someone believes the way you do, that the disagreement disqualifies them from being anything.
No requirement that they have an IQ above 50 or think the world is round, either. Even so, I would consider those people unqualified to be president.bradleybadly wrote: The constitution mandates no "evolution belief" requirement to be president.
OK, this idea that people who disagree are "evil" is your idea, not mine. I don't even believe people who do evil are necessarily evil. They are generally just misguided or misinformed.bradleybadly wrote: This is the problem you've created (love using that term in this context): anyone who isn't a strict adherent to your evolutionary beliefs becomes one of the "bad people". Then you set yourself up as some type of evolutionary superhero that will save us all from evil.
LOLbradleybadly wrote:You probably interact with creationists or people who believe in creationism more than you even know through the course of a week. Most people don't even make it an issue to get riled up over, it's just something they believe as they live their lives.
Again, you label me based on your own way of being. In fact, one of the Pastors I respect most is a firm creationist. We disagree on this issue. He knows my beliefs, I know his. He does not know all of why I believe as I do, but he is of the same mind as I that allowing any such issue to divide the church, to put it in the forefront as many have is just wrong. However, this in no way means my backing down from science as science. I have no issue with someone saying that they believe the Bible, no matter what the evidence seems to show. I have a problem with this group of people that try to deny that evidence exists or twist it in ways that have nothing to do with what is really taught about evolution. I have a problem with people who try to use the church as justification for lying. And lying is EXACTLY what the leaders of the so-called "young earth" movement are doing. The Pastor of whom I spoke is not a scientist, makes no claim to be one. He is not insisting that our school curriculum be changed to suit him. In fact, I taught his son geology, he has had my kids in his Sunday school. I simply told his son what is believed and why. He similarly teaches my kids. We don't have to agree to respect each other. IF he were to try to put himself on an environmental review board, to run for governor or even assemblyman, I would object. I do not object to his being a pastor of his church and teaching what he believes, as long as he does not claim it is verified proof, which he does not, but the ICR and their ilk do.bradleybadly wrote:Unfortunately, you're going to limit yourself in being able to be friends and enjoy life more because you've already labeled them as your enemy.
There comes a time when sitting back and being the rhetorical pacifist is appropriate and a time when you have to stand up for what you believe. When I lived in Mississippi, I tolerated my 80 year old neighbors references to "n@@##" who were "not to be trusted", etc. I did not agree with them, but I also did not get into a debate about it. They were not going to change based on one conversation with me and were half senile besides. When confronted with similar ideas from younger people, I DID, in many overt and subtle ways "fight back". And, there were consequences.bradleybadly wrote: If you continue on this crusade of yours you'll end up alienating and marginalizing yourself.
Did not say it wasn't. But you find that people's tolerance is higher when their bellies are full and they feel as though they have opportunities. That, too, has been proven. Usually, those other things to which you refer are backdrop, but its not until people feel personnally threatened that they go into attack mode.GabonX wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Those are precisely the conditions that make people go from saying "we don't like those people, disagree with their way of life, but as long as they leave us alone, we will leave them be" and into "they are the enemy and must be killed!".
This is a rather idealistic and childish misconception, not only about about Islamo Fascism, but about human nature. The idea that people will not do harm to other people because they see it as being profitable, because tenets of their religion command them to, or for no tangible reason at all has been proven incorrect in virtually every human generation.
I used to think this. But, I have seen this movement grow. And, as bradley badly did say, you find a good many otherwise intelligent people in all walks of life who believe this. And, they are not just sticking to teaching their own kids. Every state in the union this past year has faced multiple challenges to their textbooks on this issue. The have backed off some from court cases, but this issue is by no means dead. In fact, it is growing stronger than ever. And, it was absolutely not a mistake that Sarah Palin has emerged as a voice for the Tea Party. No mistake at all. Jokes aside, we ignore her real power and influence to our peril.GabonX wrote:As for creationists, I think we can agree that they're rather foolish.
The point is that the Bible is not specific on this point. It is a distortion to claim it is. Genesis is not a science textbook and cannot be read as such.GabonX wrote:I have more respect for them than for Christians that ignore what their supposed holy books say,
Like I said to Timminz, everyone is welcome to believe as they wish. However, this is not about belief. This is about science and proof.GabonX wrote:but fundamentally I believe that faith without proof is foolish, particularly when there is so much evidence to the contrary of what's believed..
.. There will always be foolish people and it's probably more tangible to manipulate them than reason with or educate them.
PLAYER57832 wrote:And, it was absolutely not a mistake that Sarah Palin has emerged as a voice for the Tea Party. No mistake at all. Jokes aside, we ignore her real power and influence to our peril.

tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:And, it was absolutely not a mistake that Sarah Palin has emerged as a voice for the Tea Party. No mistake at all. Jokes aside, we ignore her real power and influence to our peril.
And that is why you fail Player, not on one but in two ways.
First and foremost, Palin isn't a "voice" for the Tea Party. She is just on the bandwagon. She's like this big cheerleader, only she does twitter. This is the problem that drives the Progressives batty. You see the Tea Party isn't based on a specific person; they got this sort from that person, and they liked something of what this person said, and they really got motivated by some other person, and they are all pretty muched liked but they are not the "voice."
tzor wrote:But the biggest fail is that Palin is not unique. Palin is everywhere. Palin is liberal. Palin is conservative. Palin is federalist. Palin is progressive. Joke all you want about flat earth and creationist ideas, but remember there are a whole lot of "inconvenient truths" that are in fact just "convenient lies." From the notion that there is an absolute cause and effect between man made CO2 emissions and global temperatures, .
A. this has nothing to do with anything I said. B. I have never said those are not threats in this or any other thread. In fact, have not said much of anything about those things. What I have said is that creationism is impeding scientific education in this country and that is very, very harmful to us all.tzor wrote:to the notion that fiat currency gone mad (quantitive easing) is actually "good" to the notion that President Obama can actually compromise on anything. Notions that Iran, North Korea and George Soros are not serious threats to our nation and our way of life as we know it. Believe them at your peril
Lootifer wrote:I earn well above average income for my area, i'm educated and I support left wing politics.
jbrettlip wrote:You live in New Zealand. We will call you when we need to make another Hobbit movie.
bradleybadly wrote:Actually, this is a good thing for us on the conservative side of things. If the left really thinks that creationism is going to be an important issue for the 2012 elections, we've got it made. The economy is almost always the #1 issue, with the exception sometimes being national security.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:And, it was absolutely not a mistake that Sarah Palin has emerged as a voice for the Tea Party. No mistake at all. Jokes aside, we ignore her real power and influence to our peril.
And that is why you fail Player, not on one but in two ways.
First and foremost, Palin isn't a "voice" for the Tea Party. She is just on the bandwagon. She's like this big cheerleader, only she does twitter. This is the problem that drives the Progressives batty. You see the Tea Party isn't based on a specific person; they got this sort from that person, and they liked something of what this person said, and they really got motivated by some other person, and they are all pretty muched liked but they are not the "voice."
tzor wrote:But the biggest fail is that Palin is not unique. Palin is everywhere. Palin is liberal. Palin is conservative. Palin is federalist. Palin is progressive.
tzor wrote:Joke all you want about flat earth and creationist ideas, but remember there are a whole lot of "inconvenient truths" that are in fact just "convenient lies." From the notion that there is an absolute cause and effect between man made CO2 emissions and global temperatures, to the notion that fiat currency gone mad (quantitive easing) is actually "good" to the notion that President Obama can actually compromise on anything. Notions that Iran, North Korea and George Soros are not serious threats to our nation and our way of life as we know it. Believe them at your peril.
guardian1357 wrote:so wait...let me try and understand this...

tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:And, it was absolutely not a mistake that Sarah Palin has emerged as a voice for the Tea Party. No mistake at all. Jokes aside, we ignore her real power and influence to our peril.
And that is why you fail Player, not on one but in two ways.
First and foremost, Palin isn't a "voice" for the Tea Party. She is just on the bandwagon. She's like this big cheerleader, only she does twitter. This is the problem that drives the Progressives batty. You see the Tea Party isn't based on a specific person; they got this sort from that person, and they liked something of what this person said, and they really got motivated by some other person, and they are all pretty muched liked but they are not the "voice."
But the biggest fail is that Palin is not unique. Palin is everywhere. Palin is liberal. Palin is conservative. Palin is federalist. Palin is progressive. Joke all you want about flat earth and creationist ideas, but remember there are a whole lot of "inconvenient truths" that are in fact just "convenient lies." From the notion that there is an absolute cause and effect between man made CO2 emissions and global temperatures, to the notion that fiat currency gone mad (quantitive easing) is actually "good" to the notion that President Obama can actually compromise on anything. Notions that Iran, North Korea and George Soros are not serious threats to our nation and our way of life as we know it. Believe them at your peril.
bradleybadly wrote:Actually, this is a good thing for us on the conservative side of things. If the left really thinks that creationism is going to be an important issue for the 2012 elections, we've got it made. The economy is almost always the #1 issue, with the exception sometimes being national security.
guardian1357 wrote:so wait...let me try and understand this...
no one that has ever misspoke is capable of having the job the currently hold or seek?
damn thats shitty
tzor wrote:But the biggest fail is that Palin is not unique. Palin is everywhere. Palin is liberal. Palin is conservative. Palin is federalist. Palin is progressive.
SultanOfSurreal wrote:http://thinkprogress.org/2010/11/24/palin-north-korea/CO-HOST: How would you handle a situation like the one that just developed in North Korea? [...]
PALIN: But obviously, we’ve got to stand with our North Korean allies. We’re bound to by treaty –
CO-HOST: South Korean.
PALIN: Eh, Yeah. And we’re also bound by prudence to stand with our South Korean allies, yes.

Phatscotty wrote:Creationism is just the liberal passion of the week. They don't know which ones to stand on, so they are picking issues out of a bag.