Keep in mind that I am a Christian, so I don’t discount everything in
the Bible. Though I’ve made it clear that I don’t put a whole lot of
stock in the Bible as it’s obvious (to me at least) that much of it has
been rewritten – and poorly translated – over centuries.
The dawn of the tea party brought about the attempted hijacking of
the GOP by radicals, and science that had never really been up for
debate previously (besides between people who were borderline insane)
because it had always been accepted as scientific fact, suddenly became
a “debatable topic.”
Not because the science changed, but because insane people were
suddenly given a voice in mainstream politics thanks to the tea party.
All of a sudden these people began pushing the ridiculous idea that
climate change was a “global hoax” perpetrated by over 95% of the
world’s scientists and that evolution didn’t belong in the classroom.
And if we were going to teach evolution in the classroom, creationism
should be taught along side of it as another “scientific theory.”
Except, there’s just one problem with that. Creationism isn’t a scientific theory!
Which is what led to this debate. Over the last several years, Bill
Nye has been quite public with his assertion that it’s insane how
certain people want faith-based beliefs to be taught alongside proven
science in our schools.
Well, Nye wasted no time in asserting that he would make Mr. Ham look like a fool this entire night.
Going into this night, I had imagined giving specific quotes and a
detailed examination of what I had just seen. However, it didn’t take
me long before I realized that wouldn’t be necessary.
Honestly, a quick summation of what I saw is enough to properly convey just how badly Mr. Nye embarrassed Mr. Ham.
There were questions, rebuttals, long presentations and scientific
facts (well, from Nye anyway) that would make most of our heads spin.
There was talk of radiometric dating, bedrock layers, tree rings, the
expansion of the universe, evolutionary patterns of animals,
technological advancements of ships, common sense and all sorts of
scientific data which has been proven by some of best and brightest over
many years.
Then there was Mr. Ham’s argument. Which I will summarize:
“Well, there’s a book which tells me…”
No, I’m not kidding. That was honestly his answer for most
questions. Because the Bible says something, that makes it fact.
Because a book that’s been translated over centuries says something, that proves it to be fact.
I’m really not lying, that was his answer to most questions.
Oh, that and, “Well, because we can’t see the earth billions of years
ago – how do we know?” Then Mr. Ham’s “proof” being not that he can prove what’s in the Bible in any way – just that it’s in the Bible.
Seriously, that’s what he used as “proof” for most of his argument, “Because the Bible says.”
Bill Nye used facts, logic, science, data, research and common sense
while Ken Ham countered these arguments with, “Well, the Bible says…”
I seriously started laughing during parts of this.
But my favorite part came during the question and answer section when
someone submitted a question for Mr. Ham asking if he took all parts of
the Bible literally (citing a part about touching pig skin or having
multiple wives). That’s when Mr. Ham proved himself to be an absolute
hypocrite.
While the whole night he confidently spoke about the earth being
6,000 years old because that’s what the Bible says, or all these
specific things in the Bible which should be taken for their literal
word, yet during this part he stumbled over what is or isn’t taken from
natural parts.
Essentially saying, well – I guess you can’t take every word of the Bible literally because it doesn’t make sense.
Because as most of us know, the Bible is full of passages that give men the right to stone their wives and all sorts of other heinous acts that in a modern society would seem barbaric.
Because as most of us know, the Bible is full of passages that give men the right to stone their wives and all sorts of other heinous acts that in a modern society would seem barbaric.
It was quite comical to see Mr. Ham suddenly start to “subjectively”
interpret the Bible when it came to some of the more controversial
aspects of what’s written inside.
This entire night showcased that Bill Nye (over and over again) proved with science that
there’s evidence to support theories and beliefs of the scientific
community based on quantitative data collected by some of the best and
brightest this world has ever seen.
While Mr. Ham’s answers basically consisted of two things:
- Well, we didn’t see the world during that time so how do we know?
- The Bible says…
And that’s about it. No proof, no evidence – just another guy reading the Bible trying to claim that as “scientific evidence.”
So, in this debate of Science vs. Creationism, science not only won – it wasn’t even close.
Here’s the debate in full so you can laugh along – and probably learn a few things from Mr. Nye along the way.
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