CLIMATE POLITICS: Energy Committee chairman candidate claims God promised no more catastrophic climate change

It’s bad enough to blend politics and climate change, but U.S. Representative John Shimkus, a Republican from Illinois who’s seeking a chairmanship on the Energy and Commerce Committee, takes climate change denialism to another level. In the video below, Mr. Shimkus highlights everything that’s wrong with the GOP, and he illustrates how people use religion to impose their own biased and uninformed beliefs onto the rest of society. To declare that humans can’t destroy the Earth, because only God can, is foolish, ignorant, selfish, and unreasonable. Via Informed Comment.

EDUCATION: What if your child’s biology teacher is a creationist?

Image via Colin Purrington on Flickr

Via Max Fisher at The Atlantic Wire:

But what about when the roles are reversed and the one advocating creationism in the classroom is the teacher? Laden cites parenting blogger Dale McGowan, who responded to a creationist science teacher by writing a pointed letter asking for more conventional lectures. Laden sighs, “You can’t win that kind of discussion.” The teacher can “nitpick” their way out of it by insisting the student misunderstood or by saying they are simply explaining the controversy. Laden insists you get more aggressive, calling for “A decisive take-down of a creationist teacher who is in violation of the law.”

The teacher is doing something wrong, got caught, and it is perfectly reasonable for the parent, in a more or less irate manner but hopefully reasonably professionally, approaches the school administration (having first contacted, in person, someone at the National Center for Science Education) directly and issues a firm, clear, no-nonsense complaint.

Following up, Laden writes a “template” letter for his readers to use to demand that science teachers cease teaching creationism or intelligent design.


Photo source for attribution. The author or licensor of this image does not endorse my work or me and their image is protected under an attribution license.

RECOMMENDED YOUTUBE Videos

These are some fascinating videos that I’ve recently come across via YouTube:

Nature & the environment:

  1. Storm chasers capture this jaw-dropping monstrous storm on video:
  2. Here’s another menacing stormfront captured on video:
  3. Hawaii’s carnivorous caterpillars:
  4. “Piwi the Kiwi is hitting the treadmill not to lose weight but to restore his leg strength after breaking his legs in two separate accidents.”
  5. Russia’s on fire, and this video shows an attempt to escape from a village, which was left to burn. However, the driver soon discovers, as he drives into the inferno, that the road is on fire. It’s an intense video:
  6. Nuclear bomb detonations from 1945 – 1998:

    More at The New Yorker

  7. EPA Senior Policy Analyst Hugh Kaufman explains why the dispersants are deadly and how these dispersants were used to mitigate oil spill estimates, save BP billions, but at the cost of human and ecosystem health:

Politics:

  1. Cenk Uygur of The Young Turks points out the hypocrisy and selective arguments espoused by anti-gay marriage groups:
  2. Bill O’Reilly vs. Laura Ingraham on childhood obesity:
  3. David Letterman and Rachel Maddow on Breitbart and Fox News:
  4. Sarah Palin confronts Alaska protester with “Worst Governor Ever” sign and claims she understands the U.S. Constitution:

    More at Think Progress

  5. The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing Americans that deregulation, small government, and tax cuts work. On “Meet The Press” with David Gregory, John Boehner refuses to pay for tax cuts:
  6. Dee Snider, frontman of the heavy metal band Twisted Sister, takes on Al and Tipper Gore:
  7. Eric Cantor (R-VA-7th District) can’t name anything he would do to reduce spending:

Health:

  1. In this video, Jamie Oliver gives an update on his food revolution. He points out that fruit juices can have just as much sugar as sodas:
  2. President Obama explains Healthcare.gov:

EARTH DAY 2010

Today is the 40th Anniversary of Earth Day. The environmentally-themed day was “founded by U.S. Senator Gaylord Nelson [of Wisconsin] as an environmental teach-in held on April 22, 1970.” Of course, everyday should be Earth Day, but today represents a special remembrance of where our livelihoods, our goods and services, or our well-being derives. The images below represent a mere sample of Earth’s unique possessions, and these images are a reminder of why it’s important to conserve our one and only home and her unique natural possessions.

Environment-themed art with a message (click on any image to enlarge it):

Environment-themed art by Tomás Sánchez, Walton Ford, and Alexis Rockman—some of my favorite artists.


Photo source for attribution here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, and here. The authors or licensors of these images do not endorse my work or me and their images are protected under an attribution license.

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EDUCATION: In addition to science, Texas Board of Education attempts to rewrite history

I’m not a conservative or republican since I believe their political views and remedies to some of our most pressing problems are deficient or inadequate. That said, I don’t believe their ideas necessarily lack utility, but I do believe they limit themselves—it’s what makes them conservative.

Stephen Colbert put it best: “Reality has a well-known liberal bias.” Consequently, I feel that in implementing policy (take healthcare reform and any environmental issue for example), conservatives don’t have much to offer from their toolbox to repair or solve any of the diverse problems plaguing our society, so they employ the same unimaginative and predictable ideas.  As a result, their ideas often don’t correspond with reality. Perhaps it’s why only 6% of scientists identify their political party affiliation as Republican. As a result, if you can’t beat reality or objectivity, then attempt to change it. It’s what the Texas Board of Education is attempted to do. From the New York Times:

The Texas Board of Education, notorious for its past efforts to undermine the teaching of evolution in public schools, has now moved to revise the social studies curriculum to portray conservative ideas and movements in a more positive light and emphasize the role of Christianity in the nation’s founding.

It was a disturbing intervention by the board’s Republican majority into educational decisions best left to the teachers and scholars who have toiled for almost a year to produce the new curriculum standards.

.       .       .

Some of the changes sound merely foolish, like replacing the word “capitalism” with the words “free-enterprise system.” One board member explained that the term capitalism has negative connotations, as in “capitalist pig.” Others are very worrisome, like questioning the doctrine of “separation between church and state” and dropping Thomas Jefferson, who coined the phrase, from a list of figures whose writings inspired political revolutions from the 1700s on.

From a practical standpoint, the board has inserted so many conservative figures, groups and concepts that must henceforth be studied that an already-long list of requirements may become unmanageable in the classroom time available.

Educators outside of the Lone Star State worry that Texas buys such a large number of textbooks that its requirements influence what publishers include in books that are marketed nationally. That should diminish as digital publishing makes it easier to alter textbooks from state to state. But even that is no comfort to the students in Texas. They deserve to have a curriculum chosen for its educational value, not politics or ideology.

Historians aren’t happy with the Board’s changes. From the Washington Post (emphasis added):

Historians criticized proposed revisions to the Texas social studies curriculum Tuesday, saying that many of the changes are historically inaccurate and that they would affect textbooks and classrooms far beyond the state’s borders.

.       .       .

Discussions ranged from whether President Ronald Reagan should get more attention (yes), whether hip-hop should be included as part of lessons on American culture (no), and whether President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis’s inaugural address should be studied alongside Abraham Lincoln’s (yes).

Of particular contention was the requirement that lessons on McCarthyism note that “the later release of the Venona Papers confirmed suspicions of communist infiltration in U.S. government.”

.       .       .

Also contentious were changes that asserted Christian faith of the founding fathers. Historians say that the founding fathers had a variety of approaches to religion and faith; some, like Thomas Jefferson, were quite secular.

Some textbook authors expressed discomfort with the state board’s changes, and it is unclear how readily historians will go along with some of the proposals.

Apparently, the Texas State Board of Education is relying on the Internet to “look up information on historical figures that they didn’t know much about.” More on the issue via the Dallas Morning News:

Hispanic lawmakers and academic experts blasted the Texas State Board of Education for minimizing the contributions of minorities as it attempts to rewrite guidelines for the teaching of history and social studies.

.       .       .

[B]oard members, at their most recent meeting on the curriculum standards, relied on information culled from the Internet while ignoring historians as they drafted amendments to the guidelines, which are supposed to be finalized in May.

.       .       .

Republican Don McLeroy, the backbone of the conservative voting bloc, acknowledged fellow board members used Internet search engines to look up information on historical figures that they didn’t know much about. But he said members didn’t rely on the searches in the formal curriculum rewriting process.

Image by Clay Bennett found here

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