I'm with Prager and have been fighting this battle for years from behind the 
lines in a very liberal profession.  Leftist intellectuals are modern day 
McCarthy's in my opinion.

But I think it is also time to challenge the specific tenets of revealed 
religion, some of which lead us to all or nothing solutions to complex problems.

Kevin

  Real Clear Politics

  October 25, 2011 
  Are Evangelicals or University Professors More Irrational?
  By Dennis Prager

  Last week, The New York Times published an opinion piece by Karl W. Giberson 
and Randall J. Stephens, a physics professor and history professor at Eastern 
Nazarene College, respectively. The authors take evangelicals to task for being 
anti-intellectual, anti-reason and anti-science. Their evidence:

  -- Evangelicals doubt man-made global warming,

  -- Evangelicals believe that gays can "pray away" their homosexuality.

  -- Evangelicals believe Earth is only thousands of years old and that men 
lived alongside dinosaurs.

  -- Evangelicals oppose same-sex marriage.

  Given how often they are made, it's worth analyzing these charges.

  With regard to man-made global warming, the accusation that all skeptics are 
anti-science is despicable and, indeed, anti-science. The list of prominent 
scientists who dissent -- including the scientist widely considered the dean of 
climate science in America, Richard Lindzen of the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology -- is so long that there are entire websites that feature their 
names and credentials: There's a Wikipedia page titled "List of Scientists 
opposing the mainstreat scientific assessment of global warming" and a website 
called PetitionProject.org.

  The authors of the Times op-ed piece, like virtually all other left-wing 
intellectuals who comment on the subject, dismiss all skepticism regarding the 
Al Gore hypothesis that humanity is headed toward a worldwide apocalypse due to 
heat resulting from man-made carbon emissions. This is a reflection on these 
intellectuals' politics, not on their commitment to science.

  With regard to "praying away" homosexuality -- if it is indeed the normative 
evangelical position that all gays, with the right faith, can cease being 
sexually attracted to the same sex -- that position is wrong. But to the best 
of my knowledge, that is not the normative evangelical position; evangelicals 
believe that no more than they believe that prayer alone will end any undesired 
physical condition.

  At the same time, the opposite position -- the position of nearly all the 
liberal intellectual world -- that everyone's sexual orientation is fixed is a 
position also driven by ideology rather than by science. Society has a huge 
influence on how people act out their sexuality, including the gender of person 
with whom they choose to be sexual. Human sexuality -- especially female -- is 
far more elastic than the intellectual community admits. And the widespread 
liberal belief that, all things being equal, it makes no difference whether a 
child is raised by a mother and father or by two fathers or two mothers is 
hardly rational. On the issue of homosexuality, the intellectual left is just 
as driven by ideology as evangelicals.

  With regard to those evangelicals -- and for that matter, those 
ultra-orthodox Jews -- who believe that Earth is less than 10,000 years old and 
that there either were no dinosaurs or that they lived alongside human beings, 
my reaction has always been: So what? I believe that Earth is many millions of 
years old, that "six days" is meant as six periods of time (the sun wasn't even 
created until the third day, so how could there have been any days before 
then?) and that dinosaurs preexisted man by millions of years.

  But what real-life problem is caused by people who believe otherwise? Does it 
affect any of their important behaviors in life? Do they not take their 
children to doctors? Do they oppose medical research? Do they reject scientific 
discoveries that affect our lives? No. Not at all. Are there no evangelical or 
ultra-orthodox Jewish doctors? Of course there are, and apparently they are 
very comfortable learning and practicing science.

  Compared to the many irrational beliefs of secular, leftist intellectuals -- 
good and evil exist even though there is no God; male and female are 
interchangeable; international institutions are the hope of mankind -- 
evangelical irrational beliefs are utterly benign.

  And in regards to same-sex marriage, why is the normative Christian and 
Jewish belief that marriage should be between a man and a woman anti-science 
and anti-intellectual? What we have here is the usual left-wing tactic of 
smearing opponents. If you disagree with race-based affirmative action, you are 
a racist. If you disagree with the ever-expanding welfare state, you lack 
compassion. If you disagree with redefining marriage in the most radical way 
ever attempted in history, you are a hater.

  No wonder the left developed the foolish and destructive self-esteem movement 
-- no one has anywhere near the self-esteem leftists have. They are certain 
that they are better human beings in every way than those who have the temerity 
to oppose them.

  This Jew will take the evangelicals' values and the evangelicals' America 
over those of left-wing intellectuals' any day of the year. If evangelicals 
come with some views I find irrational, that's a tiny price to pay compared to 
the price humanity has paid for the left's consistently broken moral compass -- 
when it comes to America; Communism and Islamism; superiority of peace studies 
over waging war against evil; America's role in the world; Israel; the welfare 
state; Fidel Castro, Hugo Chavez and all the other left-wing dictators whom the 
left-wing has celebrated; the belief that men and women are basically the same; 
the greater worth of any animal than of the unborn human; and nearly every 
other major moral issue.

  If these professors typify the views of Eastern Nazarene, which is officially 
listed as a Christian university, it is reason for despair. Once left-wing 
values enter the evangelical bloodstream, there is almost no hope for America. 


  -- 
  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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