Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeb Thurmond
4. Education. A comparison of 15-year-olds in 30 wealthy nations found that average science scores among U.S. students ranked 17th, while average U.S. math scores ranked 24th. What role do you think the federal government should play in preparing K-12 students for the science and technology driven 21st Century?
|
McCain answered this question at the latest debate. On the subject of government spending on things like the "Bridge to Nowhere" he said about Obama:
"...when you look at some of the planetariums and other foolishness that he asked for, he shouldn’t be saying anything about Governor Palin.”
It's good to know that John McCain thinks that
planatariums and other forms of science education are foolishness. McCain's answer is
sending the eggheads into hissy fits.
Boo-hoo, McCain called you a fool. Get over it.
After all, the Bible states that the so-called "science" of these planatariums is complete hogwash: The
Book of Revelations states that stars are not "giant balls of gas" but little things which can fall to earth. (
Revelations 1:16, 6:13, 8:10, 9:1, 12:4)
Genesis clearly states the the moon is nothing but a "
lesser light" hung in the sky. (
Genesis 1:16)
Planatariums also claim that stars can be more than 6000 light-years away. From the
Guide to the Evolutionist Conspiracy:
Scientists claim that light from many stars takes more than 6000 years to get from the star to us. That's nonsense, of course, because that star did not exist more than 6000 years ago!
Ancient star-gazers were only a thousand or two years from the date of creation, thus the light from the stars farther away than 1000-2000 light years could not have been seen. That means that all stars are closer to the Earth than 1000 light years, and that measurement techniques such as stellar parallax are just the devil's lies.