“Just the Facts, Ma’am; Just the Facts”: Rod Taylor

By Rod Taylor, Deputy Leader of the CHP

With a nod to Joe Friday, the classic characterization of a police detective from the early radio and TV show, Dragnet, I’d like to approach a few modern mysteries with the line of questioning frequently attributed to him. (Apparently the oft-quoted phrase above was a truncated version of his original “All we want are the facts, ma’am”).  It would be so refreshing if some of today’s news services (?) would remember that simple bit of advice. It seems everyone is pushing an agenda and when the “facts” can be used to support that agenda, they use them. When the facts seem to contradict the agenda’s premise, they ignore them. The really frustrating use of facts is when they are thrown in , “bait-and-switch” style to support conclusions for which they provide no real evidence.

There are many examples of this but I refer directly to the unproven theories (bandied about as facts) of the origins of life, the development of species and the periods of time during which certain deduced events are hypothetically surmised to have occurred. In a world where supposed journalistic high-achievers such as writers for the New York Times  and other widely-read papers and magazines cannot seem to agree on the origin of an individual human life, (ignoring all the medical and scientific discoveries and high-tech imaging now available) these writers and pontificators seem bound by an inner compulsion they cannot disobey to declare unequivocally that they now know—beyond a reasonable doubt—how and when a dinosaur, which no living human has ever seen, nurtured its young.

I remember as a boy being fascinated by the depictions and deductions of scientist-writers in the prestigious National Geographic. The unearthing of a few stone artifacts and bits of bone were the backdrop for detailed discussions of stone-age life. Since no photographs were available of early villages and raids or of mastodon hunts and sabre-toothed tiger depredations, these were recreated by “artist’s rendition” for the pages of NG and mingled with other stories and real photos of real people and animals living today. The quality of the photos from around the world and the credentials of the contributors lent a credibility to the theories that invited a respectful confidence in the veracity of the conclusions.

In those early days, though, the articles often included the words “may have”, “might have”, “possibly”, “some scientists believe” and other caveats that at least hinted to the reader that the latest discoveries would be supplanted by others and the latest theories were still—at best—theories. Today’s pseudo-journalist feel no such compunction. After all, Believing is Seeing! Why introduce doubt when readers, young and old alike can be persuaded to conclude that theories are proven facts and prehistoric dates of millions of years can be verified simply by reading it in a journal of record.

Just this week, January 23, 2012 to be exact (as determined by the latest radioactive dating methods) CBC News, in its online version, published details of a recent fossil find and—in a stunning show of confidence for the conclusions of the scientists who made the discovery, spouted their theories as if proven in a court of law.

“A Canadian-led team of international researchers has unearthed the 190-million-year-old nesting site of the prosauropod dinosaur Massospondylus — predating previously known nesting grounds by 100 million years — at an excavation site in South Africa.” This was the bold pronouncement of the CBC post. No reference to “some scientists say” or “according to some paleontologists”; the 190-million year date fixed for these particular eggs is stated as if it was recorded by a scribe whose job it was to preserve these “facts” for the benefit of 21st Century mankind. Every one knows (at least they used to know) that there are differences of opinion about the accuracy of various fossil-dating techniques. To make a categorical statement about an event presumed to have taken place 190 million years ago is to pretend that all scientists agree. That is to substitute theory for fact. It is unacceptable in a court of law and it is unacceptable in the pages of a supposed non-biased publication.

Now I want to give due credit to the amazing work of these bone-diggers. After seeing the photographic evidence I am absolutely convinced that they have made an interesting and an important find. Those are facts and I was happy to learn a little bit more about the amazing world in which we live and some of the amazing creatures that once walked upon it. But please! Every thinking reader knows that the intent of declaring unknowable and exceedingly large time frames to be facts is to try to make our universe more compatible to Darwin’s theories and our populace more willing to place its trust in unthinking evolution and random chance. To mix facts and fancy in a “scientific” story is to use propaganda tactics and to insult the intelligence of readers. It also insults the intelligence of the Intelligent Designer, the only One who knows when the mysterious Massospondylus actually laid its eggs.

People have strong feelings about the origins of the universe, the origins of life and the origins of man. The effort to induce people to subscribe to one’s pet theory by padding a few discoveries with a lot of speculation and calling it “science” is, at best , misguided and, at worst, devious. CBC, National Geographic, the New York Times, the Knowledge Network, etc. should know better than that. “All we want is the facts”.

Click here to learn more about Rod Taylor.

Darwinist extermination in Norway

WorldNetDaily.com – July 24, 2011
Terrorist proclaimed himself ‘Darwinian,’ not ‘Christian’
Norwegian’s manifesto shows Breivik not religious, having no personal faith

WASHINGTON – A review of Anders Behring Breivik’s 1,500-page manifesto shows the media’s quick characterization of the Norwegian terrorist as a “Christian” may be as incorrect as it was to call Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh one.

Breivik was arrested over the weekend, charged with a pair of brutal attacks in and near Oslo, Norway, including a bombing in the capital city that killed 7 and a shooting spree at a youth political retreat on the island of Utoya that killed more than 80 victims.

Piecing together Breivik’s various posts on the Internet, many media reports have characterized the terrorist – who says he was upset over the multiculturalist policies stemming from Norway’s Labour Party – as a “right-wing, Christian fundamentalist.”

Yet, while McVeigh rejected God altogether, Breivik writes in his manifesto that he is not religious, has doubts about God’s existence, does not pray, but does assert the primacy of Europe’s “Christian culture” as well as his own pagan Nordic culture.

Breivik instead hails Charles Darwin, whose evolutionary theories stand in contrast to the claims of the Bible, and affirms: “As for the Church and science, it is essential that science takes an undisputed precedence over biblical teachings. Europe has always been the cradle of science, and it must always continue to be that way. Regarding my personal relationship with God, I guess I’m not an excessively religious man. I am first and foremost a man of logic. However, I am a supporter of a monocultural Christian Europe.”

Read the rest here.

Scientists terrified of being exposed because they are independent thinkers

———- Forwarded message ———-
From:

The Denton interview was taken last month (June). Here are some more interviews from the same event…

Claire Berlinski
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/This-Morning-s-Panel-Political-Correctness

David Berlinski
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Great-Expectations-Under-the-Tuscan-Sun

Paul Nelson
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Why-Are-Young-American-Scientists-Too-Afraid-to-Appear-in-This-Video

David Berlinski
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Why-Haven-t-Our-Great-Expectations-of-the-Sciences-Been-Met

Michael Denton
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Mike-Denton-and-the-Coming-Post-Mechanistic-Era-in-Biology

David Berlinski & Paul Nelson
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Life-Your-Questions-Answered-or-at-Least-Asked

Steve Myer
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Free-Markets-A-Lunar-Eclipse-the-Engines-of-Innovation-and-Intelligent-Design/%28comment%29/156095

David Berlinski
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/From-Popper-to-Goedel-Your-Questions-Answered

Robert Marks & Rabbi Moshe Averick
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Great-Expectations-Information-Theory-and-the-Maverick-Rabbi

Claire Berlinski
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/Great-Expectations-Two-Memories

The influence of evolutionary thinking reaches far beyond biology

WORLD magazine – July 2, 2011
Darwin matters
The influence of evolutionary thinking reaches far beyond biology
By Marvin Olasky

Our Books of the Year story on page 36 assumes that teaching about creation or evolution is important—but is it? After all, we are entering a campaign season in which the debate will focus on healthcare, government spending, and other hot issues. We don’t have time to discuss theories, do we?

We should make time for one big reason: If Darwin was right the Bible is wrong, and we are foolish to follow it. But evolutionary thought that ignores God also has other effects of which we may be unaware. (Ask a fish about water and he’s likely to reply, “What’s water?”—if he’s sufficiently evolved to be a talking fish.) The theological objections to macroevolution are literally crucial because they tell us whether the Cross was necessary, but some secondary issues are also worth pondering.

Click here to read the article.

Evolution and aliens – “scientific” insanity

Creation Ministries International – May 12, 2011
UFOlogy: The world’s fastest-growing “scientific” religion?
By Gary Bates and Lita Cosner

Many people wonder why we write about the UFO phenomenon. Isn’t it just a ‘side issue’? But in fact, it’s so important to oppose this particular belief, because ET belief is quickly becoming the world’s most scientifically acceptable false religion and a major stumbling block to Christianity. And although some of its adherents are serious followers, the reality is, that polls show that belief in UFOs is mainstream and held by the average ‘Joe’ in the street. For example, a CNN/Time Magazine poll in 1997, found, among other things that;

  • 80% believe that the government is hiding the existence of extraterrestrial life forms
  • 64% believe aliens have contacted humans
  • 50% believe that aliens have abducted humans
  • 93% have never been abducted
  • 75% believe that a UFO crashed near Roswell

So, in one sense, the majority of the population believes that UFOs are real physical craft piloted by beings from other planets. Does that make them adherents in the religious sense? The purpose of this article is to sound a clarion call that such beliefs make people vulnerable to further and possibly deeper deception. This is why it is important to place all of our thinking on the Bible, and not be misled into thinking that because the universe is so big, that there must be extraterrestrial life on other planets. Our view that God did not create life on other planets has even made us relatively unpopular among Christian friends. However, as this issue affects the veracity of God’s Word, and is indeed, a salvation issue, we have been careful; drawing a strong,exegetical and historical picture from the Bible. Many are worried that real ET visitations might falsify the Bible if we are wrong. While such motives might be sincere, we should not be concerned that the Bible should be falsified as to its truth claims—particularly if we are claiming it is the very Word of God.

Unlike Buddhism, Islam, etc, extraterrestrial belief has a veneer of scientific credibility. Arguably, the world’s most famous scientist, physicist Stephen Hawking, has even stated that he believes aliens probably exist. And the world’s most famous atheistic evolutionist, Richard Dawkins, as anti-theistic as he is, has no problem with aliens theoretically seeding life on earth, provided that somewhere down the chain of creators, there’s a life form that arose via evolution. Antichristian scientist, and co-discoverer of the DNA molecule, Sir Francis Crick, similarly proposed that life came via panspermia (life seeded by aliens) as a possible explanation for the mind-boggling complexity of the coded information on DNA. As atheists, mainly due to their evolutionist beliefs, they claim there is no evidence for God. However, they have no problem resorting to ‘unseen’ aliens as our creators. Design, apparently is not the problem. It’s God being the designer that they have a problem with.

Read the whole article here.

Oops! 65-million-year-old fossil is alive today

Received via email from Creation Ministries International…

News flash! … 1938

Evolutionists were shocked when fishermen off the coast of Madagascar hauled in a large, unusual fish … a live Coelacanth! Scientists had previously only known this creature from the fossil record, but evolutionists dated their extinction, along with the dinosaurs, to at least 65 million years ago. Yet … this then dubbed “living fossil” remained virtually unchanged from the fossilized specimens. Why?

Read more here.