PEERing into the manufacturing
of an anti-creationist urban myth
by Mark Looy, CCO, AiG–US
January 23, 2007
Over the past three years, AiG had been tracking the
efforts of anti-creationists in
Creationist Tom Vail’s Grand Canyon: A Different View has now become more than a book containing beautiful photographs of the Canyon’s grandeur with accompanying text (including contributions by AiG staff and others)—it’s become a national controversy. You see, Tom’s book explains that the Canyon’s formation came about by rapid processes associated with the Flood of Noah (rather than by slow erosion over millions of years, which is the standard story presented by park rangers); because of that, evolutionist book-banners set their sights on it. The book then became the focus of much controversy in 2004 (see Deluged with pro-Flood email!), and generated over 7,000 letters/emails to the National Park Service as well as coverage by CBS Evening News, NBC Nightly News, CNN, The New York Times, and many other media outlets.
In recent weeks,
the controversy has re-surfaced. Here’s why: the Park Service has never announced
a decision as to whether Mr. Vail’s book would remain in park bookstores, but it
has remained popular at Canyon bookstores. Thus the censorship efforts have not
succeeded and have actually boosted sales of the book. A frustrated activist group
recently saber-rattled (again) when it issued a news release (December 28) about
Grand Canyon: A Different View.
It was yet another attempt by evolutionists
in the environmentalist activist group PEER (Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility) to bring the book’s controversial contents to the public’s attention
and force the National
Park Service’s hand to make a determination of the book’s
status.
In doing so, however, PEER received a largely negative
reaction, of which the harshest rebuke came from what PEER would have normally called
a friend: a leading evolutionist, who now feels duped by PEER and is extremely angry.
This person is the publisher of Skeptic magazine, Michael Shermer, and a
frequent critic of AiG. In this case, Shermer has done an admirable job of researching
and exposing the false claims contained in the PEER news release, while at the same
time admitting that he was taken in by accepting PEER’s claims uncritically.
So, what was stated in the PEER news release that was
discovered to be so wrong? Shermer, in his Skeptic article entitled “Fact Checking 101,”
has thankfully done the extensive research for us.
At the outset of his exposé of PEER’s claims, Shermer
rebutted the very first sentence of the news release, in which it was stated: “
A few days before posting his web article, Shermer
had written about PEER’s claims and accepted them at face value. In his retraction,
Shermer admitted that when he first reported on PEER’s accusation that pressure
had supposedly been applied by the Bush administration to back off the Canyon’s
“age” question, he had “accepted this claim by PEER without calling the National
Park Service (NPS) or the Grand Canyon National Park (GCNP) to check it.”
Shermer’s first article, plus numerous websites and
newspapers, quoted PEER’s executive director, Jeff Ruch, who declared that “to avoid
offending religious fundamentalists, our National Park Service is under orders to
suspend its belief in geology.” But those who inquired with federal park officials
about the issue were told by these officials (at the NPS and GCNP) that PEER’s claims
were absolutely false. Many of these people then contacted Shermer and informed
him that alleged pressure from anyone in the Bush administration to shrink away
from the standard long-age teaching of the Canyon’s formation was non-existent.
In addition, some Canyon rangers themselves wrote Shermer and stated that PEER’s
claims regarding Bush administration officials supposedly being sympathetic to creationists
were absolutely wrong.
Shermer, confronted with all of this information, phoned
Mr. Ruch to ask what evidence he had to support his claim of the Bush administration’s
heavy-handedness. Shermer, now living up to his reputation of being one of
Meanwhile, PEER still has an online petition posted
to its website for people to express their concern about these unsubstantiated claims,
and which contains the bizarre claim: “The Bush administration is catering to right-wing
fundamentalist groups by agreeing to censor videos, peddle creationist dogma and
erect crosses and Biblical plaques in our national parks. Park scientists, curators
and managers who object risk their careers.”
We want to point out that many AiG staff members visit
the
Shermer’s opinion is that PEER is an “anti-religion
liberal activist watchdog group in search of demons to exorcise and dragons to slay.”
He then apologized to his readers for not fact-checking his first story before publishing
it on his site. Now, let’s see if Pulitzer prize-winning cartoonist Gary Trudeau
of Doonesbury fame will make his own retraction; Trudeau, a vehement critic
of President Bush, used his
January 13 strip
(which contains objectionable language) to regurgitate the false claim by PEER and
once again find opportunity to bash the president.
The book controversy started when the presidents of
seven geological societies (representing tens of thousands of geologists and paleontologists)
wrote a letter
in 2003 to the superintendent of
Tom Vail praises God for what happened: “This reminds
me of the story in Genesis of Joseph being sold by his brothers. Years later when
they met again, he told them, ‘As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant
it for good in order to bring about this present result …’ (Genesis 50:20). And
the result of the controversy has been for the glory of the Lord’s Kingdom, for
more people then ever are examining this issue.*”
There are two ironies to point out. First, evolution
is itself a worldview built on its own beliefs regarding the origins of everything.
In other words, Vail’s book is not the only “religious” book in Canyon bookstores.
The other irony is that Vail, the book’s compiler, is a veteran guide at the Canyon
(he even worked for the NPS for a few years), and he used to present the evolutionary
explanation of how
Vail told us on Monday that “You have to ask yourself,
‘Why is it a debate at all? Why is this little book such a threat?’
I believe it
is because the book attempts to shine some Light into this darkened world in which
we live, light that comes in the form of Truth.”
AiG asks why the National Park Service shouldn’t give
Canyon visitors the opportunity to consider an alternative, plausible interpretation for the Canyon’s formation. Please realize that no one is being forced to buy Tom
Vail’s book. Yet evolutionary activists—dating back to 2003—still want to engage
in book-banning and present only their view of the Canyon, to the exclusion of other
views.
*