... at least in the area of public education.
The end of ACSI v. Stearns | NCSE
^ Sounds like politicking as I would've just sided with the admissions office on this one.
Fine and dandy to have your beliefs but please don't go whining about why a publicly funded university decides to not accept your credits/coursework because it didn't adhere to their standards. It would've set a danagerous precedent had the plaintiffs gotten their way in this case. And if you really want a college education and hold on to your beliefs, there's more than a hundred institutions (accredited) across this country that can give you the same kind of education with a bent towards your religious ideologies.
I think this was some nefarious movement on the part of Christians to try to slither their way in and set policies across this country with their taint and try to "Christianize" this country.
The end of ACSI v. Stearns | NCSE
^ Sounds like politicking as I would've just sided with the admissions office on this one.
Creationism was prominent in the case. The plaintiffs objected to the university system's policy of rejecting high school biology courses that use creationist textbooks as "inconsistent with the viewpoints and knowledge generally accepted in the scientific community." Michael Behe, a proponent of "intelligent design" creationism, served as a scientific expert witness for the plaintiffs, although his defense of the creationist biology textbooks was unavailing. Wendell Bird, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, is a former employee of the Institute for Creation Research; he defended Louisiana's 1981 "equal time" act all the way to the Supreme Court, where it was ruled to violate the Establishment Clause in the decision in Edwards v. Aguillard (1987).
I think this was some nefarious movement on the part of Christians to try to slither their way in and set policies across this country with their taint and try to "Christianize" this country.
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