Foot soldiers who lack vision

The NCSE is an excellent organization, and I've frequently urged people at my talks to join it. However, it's also a limited organization, and this post by Richard Hoppe at the Panda's Thumb exposes their flaws. It's blind. It's locked in to one strategy. It's response to people who try to branch out in new directions is to discourage them, often in a rather patronizing way. This is not a good approach to take when we've been deadlocked for years and they offer no prospects for future victory.

I've been making the argument for some time that the NCSE is our defensive line, and they are great at that...we don't want to lose them. In fact, they are so good that we haven't lost a creationist court case since Scopes, in recent years thanks to the invaluable assistance of the staff at NCSE, and we've built up such a body of legal precedent that we can feel fairly secure that they creationists are going to consistently get their butts kicked in the courts (it also helps that the creationists are incompetent at both science and the law). With that success, however, comes complacency and overconfidence and a belief that their approach is is the One True Way…and now, a gradual drift into identifying more with the opposition than with a significant percentage of their own team and their own fans. They also seem determined to ignore reality — we live in a country that is split in the middle on the topic of evolution, and the creationists are not in decline. Victories in the courtroom are not the same as victories in the minds of the population.

Continue reading:
http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2009/04/foot_soldiers_who_lack_vision.php

TAGGED: COMMENTARY, EDUCATION, SCIENCE


RELATED CONTENT

Ancient walking mystery deepens

Helen Briggs - BBC News - Science &... 5 Comments

One of the first creatures to step on land could not have walked on four legs, 3D computer models show.

The Center of all Things

Seth Andrews - YouTube -... 20 Comments

The Center of all Things
An homage to Carl Sagan's "Pale Blue Dot," this video explores humankind's place in the cosmos.

Welcome to the Multiverse

Brian Greene - The Daily Beast 33 Comments

The latest developments in cosmology point toward the possibility that our universe is merely one of billions.

Take a stand for public access to...

Bonnie Swoger - Scientific American 4 Comments

Take five minutes of your time to say that yes, cancer patients, researchers, high school students and people around the country should be able to find out what their taxes already paid for.

Draining of world's aquifers feeds...

Damian Carrington - The Observer 3 Comments

"In the long run, I would still be more concerned about the impact of climate change, but this work shows that even if we stabilise the climate, we might still get sea level rise due to how we use water."

'Ring of fire' eclipse to begin

- - BBC News - Science & Environment 6 Comments

An "annular eclipse" will be visible from a 240 to 300km-wide swathe of Earth stretching from Asia across the Pacific to the western US on Monday.

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment