Archive for the 'colleges' Category

May 02 2008

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Kevin Bussey

‘Expelled’ Correct on Darwin, Hitler Link, Says Christian Group

[Christian Post]

In Ben Stein’s recent box office splash and pro-intelligent design documentary, “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed,” links between Darwinism and the genocidal policies of Adolf Hitler are probed and explored. That link, according to Coral Ridge Ministries, has been historically proven time and time again.In 2006, Coral Ridge Ministries, one of the largest Christian media ministries in the nation, produced its own documentary on the subject titled, “Darwin’s Deadly Legacy.”

Jerry Newcombe, co-producer of the film, said “Expelled” brought up a fresh examination of the facts – namely that Darwinism, and later, through its racially charged forms of social Darwinism advocating the extermination of “inferior” races, provided Hitler with the springs to launch the most horrific genocide known to man.

“The ideas of Charles Darwin helped fuel the Nazi killing machine, which took the lives of some 10-15 million people,” he said in a statement.

Read more here.

[From me]

Rebuttal, anyone, anyone?

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35 responses so far

May 01 2008

Profile Image of Kevin Bussey
Kevin Bussey

Expelled–A review

Last night I attended Expelled with a couple of guys from our church.  We had a great time eating at Moes Grill and then going to the movie.

The premise of the movie is that scientists who believe in Intelligent Design are losing jobs & being denied tenure. Ben Stein was witty, funny, and brilliant in the movie. He interviewed both sides so those who argue it was slanted have their own agenda. It is obvious from this movie that those in charge of tenure in universities & the scientific community really don’t want freedom of expression when it comes to the origin of humans.

The best case for ID came from those trying to destroy it. Richard Dawkins was no match for Stein’s questions. The sad thing about this movie is that it was true. I highly recommend it & give it 4.9 out of 5 hockey sticks.

What do you think? anyone, anyone?

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25 responses so far

Apr 16 2008

Profile Image of Kevin Bussey
Kevin Bussey

Expelled


[Relevant Mag]
At the invitation of Rick Schirmer of Motive Media, I recently attended the screening of Premise Media’s Expelled, a new Docu-flick investigating the hot debate between Evolution and Intelligent Design theories. Ben Stein (the monotone teacher from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and The Wonder
Years) is the film’s co-writer, and lead. He arrived at the screening with a suit and a pair of Vans.

The film opens by exposing severe cases of highly-qualified educators and professors at top universities who have been fired for mentioning that the evolution theory has some flaws. Top professors are denied tenure, editors fired, and journalists shunned for touching the subject even at its most innocuous levels. It continues, slowly peeling back the layers, revealing scientific and academic intolerants (many of them funded by our tax dollars) that have swiftly and aggressively silenced any dissent—either by Intelligent Design proponents or anyone questioning Darwin’s theory, a deliberate crushing of our freedom of inquiry.

The documentary is funny, serious and definitely entertaining. It is very well-edited and cleverly intercut with movie clips from the ’40s and ’50s that illustrate the preceding point in a comical way.
Unlike some other documentary films, Expelled doesn’t just talk to people representing one side of the story. We are openly able to view the double standards and contradictions among the evolution advocates and intolerants who have built seemingly impenetrable walls around the sacrosanct theory of evolution and (with a disturbingly hypocritical intolerance that kills the spirit of progressive discussion) refuse to allow any rational debate. At one point a notable professor is speechless on camera, when confronted by Stein with an email in which he calls Intelligent Design proponents “Christian idiots.”

The theater erupted with laughter when atheist Dawkins went around in circles stretching to try to explain where matter came from that he asserts allowed for evolution to begin. After some back-peddling he leaves Stein with a theory, that “aliens” may have “seeded” the planet. Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist at Oxford, states, “Certainly I see the scientific view of the world as incompatible with religion.” He makes no bones about his hatred for the Judeo-Christian God. Responding to Stein’s comments, he quotes from his own best-selling book a laundry list of degrading names which he ascribes to God.

 

Read about it here.

[From me]

I can’t wait to go see this one. It is about time someone exposed the hypocrisy in higher education. I wonder if Ben says, “atheists, agnostics, humanists, darwinists, anyone, anyone?”

What do you think?

[HT] Tylor Long

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10 responses so far

Apr 13 2008

Profile Image of Kevin Bussey
Kevin Bussey

Teacher thinks it’s his job to get class to change personal beliefs

Filed under ACLU, Hypocrisy, colleges, religion

[World Net Daily]

A community college in New York has been presented with a demand letter from the American Center for Law and Justice to halt a professor’s classroom practices that allegedly have damaged at least one student – so far.

The letter from the ACLJ targets Suffolk County Community College and will be the prelude to a federal lawsuit if the issue isn’t resolved, the organization said.

At issue is a professor’s demand that students “change their own personal viewpoints or state that they are unsure of whether their own personal beliefs are correct” on religious issues, according to the letter.

That is an expression of hostility to religion, the letter explains.

In the letter to Suffolk County Attorney Christine Malafi, the ACLJ explained the problem started when DeLuca took the required philosophy class. She’s been a student at the school for two years, and holds a 3.9 grade point average. She even got good grades in the philosophy class “until her religious beliefs became known,” the organization said.

“The grades she received on class assignments dropped significantly once God and religion became prominent topics of class discussion and her refusal to compromise her Christian faith became apparent,” the ACLJ said. “This is because the course goes beyond merely requiring knowledge of prominent philosophers and their arguments or ways of thinking, which Gina does not object to.”

In addition to the lower grades, the ACLJ said, the professor has called the student “closed-minded,” “uncritical,” “hurtful,” and “blinded by belief.”

Read about it here.

[From me]

So much for open minded professors and tolerance! I would feel the same way if it was a Christian teacher towards and atheist, Mormon or Muslim.

What do you think?

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One response so far

Apr 09 2008

Profile Image of Kevin Bussey
Kevin Bussey

‘Positively Pessimistic?’

I thought this opinion by this college student was interesting:

[Spartan Daily]

by Felicia Ann Aguinaldo

My boyfriend thinks I’m going to hell.

 Well, he didn’t actually say it, but he thinks that if you don’t go to church, you won’t get into heaven.

 And since I don’t go to church, I guess I’m not getting into heaven.

 I’m not completely sure whether this bothers me, though, because I’m not even sure if there is a heaven.

Hell, I’m not even sure if there is a God. 

But wait, before you judge me, please understand where I’m coming from.

I was baptized Catholic, and once upon a time, I attended a Catholic church, where my sisters and I ran around the pews chasing each other. But don’t worry, we only attended a few times.

 Then, out of nowhere, my dad and stepmom decided the Catholic Church wasn’t good enough and became born-again Christians, which is when they forced my sisters and me to attend their God-worshipping church. In the end, my sisters and I quit going to their church, but my dad continues to preach to us God’s word.

My other encounters with religion - or lack of it - come from my grandma (a Buddhist), my stepdad (an atheist) and my stepgrandma (a Jew).

With all of these religious views in the mix, it’s no wonder I’m agnostic.

I don’t think there’s any way to tell whether God exists, but I also don’t believe he doesn’t exist.

What I do believe, though, is that any religion that excludes non-believers is not one in which I want to take part.

What kind of religion teaches its followers that people who don’t go to church will go to hell?

What about the people who can’t make it to church every Sunday? What about the people who would rather worship God in their own homes than in a church?

Just because I don’t identify with a religion doesn’t mean I’m not a good person. 

Just because I don’t attend church every Sunday doesn’t mean I don’t live my life according to how a good Christian would live his or her life.

I honor my parents, and I am not a murderer, adulterer or thief.

I appreciate the little and big things in life like the shining sun, the person who holds open the door for others, and the good health of my family and friends.

I pray - every once in a while - to whichever God is listening and ask him to keep all people safe from harm, to protect those who are less fortunate than myself, and to keep everyone warm and not hungry for at least the night.

I have never even tried drugs, I do not drink in excess, and I am not an obsessive gambler.

And just because I don’t attend church every Sunday, this means I am doomed to hell?

 That seems unfair to me.

 What about the people who do attend church but do so only to ensure their places in heaven?

 The man who physically or emotionally abuses his family, the woman who is cheating on her husband, the child goes to church because he or she has to - these are the people who will make it into heaven just because they go to church and say they believe in God?

If God is as selective as Christians make him seem, I don’t think I want to be associated with Christianity. 

So, even if I am categorized as the non-believer who is going to hell, at least I know I lived my life as a good person. 

And who said I wanted to get into the Christian heaven anyway?

Read from the source here.

[From me]

She sounds like a wonderful young lady.  I do agree with one statement she made.  She said it all seems unfair. She is right.  What would be fair is that we would all be sent to hell because we have disobeyed God. If I got what was fair, I would get death.  What some people don’t understand is that Jesus offers eternal life for free.  We can’t earn anything in God’s eyes.  We receive His love, forgiveness and grace as a gift.  When you get a gift, you don’t pay for it or it isn’t a gift.  Gifts can’t be bought.  

This moral young lady lists a nice resume for goodness.  But being good isn’t good enough.  Also, church doesn’t get a person into heaven either.  The thief on the cross next to Jesus probably never set foot in church but Jesus said he would be with Jesus because he believed.  

I’m “Positively Optimistic” that God sent His Son to die for the sins of the entire world.  All we have to do is trust Him and He begins to live in each one of us.

What do you think?

 

[Sorry, the comments were turned off accidently–I haven’t learned Wordpress 2.5 yet!]

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6 responses so far

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