Writing Information

When I Run Out of Ideas


I do on occasion run out of ideas for my column writing. I do this after finishing a huge writing project like a book. I am just plain "written out" and am fresh out of things to say. When this happens, I turn to the news and am rarely disappointed.

This morning, I read a story by Associated Press writer, Carl Hartman, entitled, Smithsonian Finds Scopes Trial Photos. This seemed innocuous. The story, as well as the photos, were... interesting.

What got my "Snit-O-Meter" going was how this reporter, like probably everyone on the face of the earth would report, reported the Scopes Trial as a genuine and bona fide criminal trial that took place.

Would it surprise you to learn that it was not so?

Let me first site two sources you simply must read. The first is an article by Carol Iannone.[1] The second is small book by Phillip E. Johnson, a law graduate of Harvard and The University of Chicago. He was also a law clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren and taught law for thirty years at University of California at Berkley.

In Johnson's book, Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds[2], he says:

"The Scopes Trial was not a serious prosecution but a symbolic confrontation engineered to put the town of Dayton, Tennessee on the map. The Tennessee legislature had funded a new science education program and, to reassure the public that science would not be used to discredit religion, had included as a symbolic measure a clause forbidding the teaching of evolution. The governor, who signed the bill, realizing that any prosecution would be an embarrassment, predicted that the law would not be enforced. The American Civil Liberties Union wanted a test case, however, and advertised for a teacher willing to be a nominal defendant in a staged prosecution."[3]

This man never had a chance in hell of going to jail or paying a fine for anything. The Scopes Trial was a hoax.

Now I encourage you to seek out these sources and read them. The small book by Johnson can be purchased cheaply at most bookstores and at Amazon.com. Get it and read it!

But my point in writing about this is NOT to unravel the hoax of the Scopes Trial but to pose an issue that I often bring up in my writings and in my newest, yet-to-be-released book, America's Anti-Mexican Xenophobia (I apologize for that shameless plug for my book-not really! BUY IT!).

It is just beyond the pale that this Associated Press writer would accept, minus the application of a finely tuned "Phony-Baloney Detector", without question that the Scope's Trial was a genuine criminal prosecution. I might add the American public as a whole and most scientists as well to that list.

How is it the Scope's Trial, as well as any other number of ideologically motivated hoaxes (The Gay Agenda movement?) has been accepted and ingrained into the minds of the American people as incontrovertible fact?

Harvard Genetics Professor Richard Lewontin writes of a possible reason (one which I accept as valid):

"We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a priori commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counterintuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door. The eminent Kant scholar Lewis Beck used to say that anyone who could believe in God could believe in anything. To appeal to an omnipotent deity is to allow that at any moment the regularities of nature may be ruptured, that miracles may happen."[4]

Professor Lewontin's quote is probably the most salient explanation for why the Evolution hypothesis or the "I was born that way" Gay Agenda hypothesis seems so certain to elitist insiders and so uncertain to those outside the elite groups. It is the a priori commitment to an ideology first, then to setting about to "prove" their ideology with evidence. These groups are compelled by their ideological a priori commitment to go about creating methodologies of investigation, to produce their desired outcomes, based not on Critical Thinking Skills (Phony-Baloney Detection) but on ideology.

This is why it is so important NOT to live your life according to untested assumptions! You have to develop a finely tuned and razor sharp Phony-Baloney Detection kit that you will pull out to evaluate everything you hear and read-including this author's writings!

Thinking critically is hard work. It takes time and it takes commitment. Nevertheless, please do not doom yourself to living an "a priori" commitment to an ideology first kind of life. Test! Test! Test!

Get busy developing that phony-baloney detection kit today!

In addition, make sure you buy all my books!

[1] http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9702/articles/iannone.html

[2] Defeating Darwinism by Opening Minds; by Phillip E. Johnson; Intervarsity Press; copyright @1997

[3] Ibid

[4] The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism; by Phillip E. Johnson; http://www.firstthings.com/ftissues/ft9711/articles/johnson.html

Freelance writer, Syndicated Columnist, and book author, Doug Bower, has written a compelling new book titled, AMERICA'S ANTI-MEXICAN XENOPHOBIA. Have you wondered if the Minuteman Project is really on the "up and up"? Have you wondered if they represent all that is good and right with America-paragons of patriotic virtue? Doug Bower may have the answers you've been looking for.

Check out his new book: http://www.lulu.com/mexicanliving


MORE RESOURCES:

AceShowbiz

Selena Gomez Denies Writing 'I'm Sorry' for Nick Jonas
AceShowbiz - 3 hours ago
Denying talking about her love relationship with Nick Jonas in song 'I'm Sorry', Selena Gomez indeed admits that she has a close relationship with him and ...


Educators question standardized test's validity
Central Maine Morning Sentinel, ME - Sep 6, 2008
BY KELLEY BOUCHARD BY KELLEY BOUCHARD More than three-quarters of Maine's eighth-graders performed poorly on the state's standardized writing test for ...
Officials scrap results of Maine writing test Barre Montpelier Times Argus
all 6 news articles


RTE.ie

24 stops shooting for more writing
RTE.ie, Ireland - 3 hours ago
Filming on the seventh series of '24' is to stop for 18 days to allow writers to work on scripts for the show. The Hollywood Reporter says that filming will ...


The Associated Press

Chris Brown busy writing songs for Britney Spears
The Associated Press - 7 hours ago
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Chris Brown was tied to two of the hottest women at the MTV Video Music Awards: Rihanna and Britney Spears. ...


Chicago Lit: 'Travel Writing' by Evanston author Peter Ferry
Chicago Sun-Times, United States - Sep 7, 2008
That's the question that keeps popping up when reading Evanston writer Peter Ferry's novel, Travel Writing. In the engrossing story, a man becomes obsessed ...


Gothamist

The Times is Writing About Status Updates (16 Hours Ago)
Gothamist, NY - 14 hours ago
Today's NY Times Magazine has an in-depth exploration of the microblogging phenomenon brought on by sites such as Facebook, Flickr and Twitter. ...
Twitter and the transformation of friendship Beliefnet.com
all 2 news articles


Student entries sought for writing-art contest
Baltimore Sun, United States - Sep 7, 2008
Students in kindergarten through 12th grade are invited to illustrate the theme, "What Maryland Means to Me," in creative writing or art. ...


Hurricane season, insurance writing don't mix
Press-Register - al.com, AL - Sep 7, 2008
By KATHY JUMPER Broker Bruce Pfeiffer had four sales pending when Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast in 2005. One sale was canceled because of storm ...


Kids Get A Grip On Writing
TheDay, CT - 16 minutes ago
Instead of spending hours at a table writing and rewriting sentences, Davis's group of 10 boys and three girls, ages 6 to 9, spent that time playing with ...


Student writing workshop offered
Aiken Standard (subscription), SC - 6 hours ago
By RACHEL JOHNSON The Children's Book Festival is now offering a "Student's Creative Writing Workshop" available to all students in grades 4 through 12 ...

Writing - Google News

home | site map
© 2006