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Darwin-Free Fun for Creationists
New York Times ^ | 05/01/2004 | ABBY GOODNOUGH

Posted on 04/30/2004 10:41:36 PM PDT by general_re

PENSACOLA, Fla., April 29 — Robert and Schön Passmore took their children to Disney World last fall and left bitterly disappointed. As Christians who reject evolutionary theory, the family scoffed at the park's dinosaur attractions, which date the apatosaurus, brachiosaurus and the like to prehistoric times.

"My kids kept recognizing flaws in the presentation," said Mrs. Passmore, of Jackson, Ala. "You know — the whole `millions of years ago dinosaurs ruled the earth' thing."

So this week, the Passmores sought out a lower-profile Florida attraction: Dinosaur Adventure Land, a creationist theme park and museum here that beckons children to "find out the truth about dinosaurs" with games that roll science and religion into one big funfest with the message that Genesis, not science, tells the real story of the creation.

Kent Hovind, the minister who opened the park in 2001, said his aim was to spread the message of creationism through a fixture of mainstream America — the theme park — instead of pleading its case at academic conferences and in courtrooms.

Mr. Hovind, a former public school science teacher with his own ministry, Creation Science Evangelism, and a hectic lecture schedule, said he had opened Dinosaur Adventure Land to counter all the science centers and natural history museums that explain the evolution of life with Darwinian theory. There are dinosaur bone replicas, with accompanying explanations that God made dinosaurs on Day 6 of the creation as described in Genesis, 6,000 years ago. Among the products the park gift shop peddles are T-shirts with a small fish labeled "Darwin" getting gobbled by a bigger fish labeled "Truth."

"There are a lot of creationists that are really smart and debate the intellectuals, but the kids are bored after five minutes," said Mr. Hovind, who looks boyish at 51 and talks fast. "You're missing 98 percent of the population if you only go the intellectual route."

The theme park is just the latest approach to promoting creationism outside the usual school curriculum route, which Mr. Hovind and others see as important, but too limited and not sufficiently appealing to modern young families. Creationist groups are also promoting creationist vacations, including dinosaur digs in South Dakota, fossil-collecting trips in Australia and New Zealand, and tours of the Grand Canyon ("raft the canyon and learn how Noah's flood contributed to the formation").

Dan Johnson, an assistant manager of the park, said there were also creationism-themed cruises, with lectures on the subject amid swimming and shuffleboard.

A Kentucky creationist group called Answers in Genesis says it is building a 100,000-square-foot complex outside Cincinnati with a museum, classrooms, a planetarium and a special-effects theater where moviegoers can experience the flood and other events described in Genesis.

Ken Ham, the group's chief executive, said marketing surveys suggested that the complex would draw not just home-schooling families and other creationists, but mainstream church groups and curiosity seekers. Mr. Ham said a former Universal Studios art director was designing exhibits for the complex, including dioramas of Adam and Eve and a model of Noah's Ark. The complex will open in 2006 at the earliest, Mr. Ham said.

At Dinosaur Adventure Land, visitors can make their own Grand Canyon replica with sand and read a sign deriding textbooks for teaching that the Colorado River formed the canyon over millions of years: "This is clearly not possible. The top of the Grand Canyon is 4,000 feet higher than where the river enters the canyon! Rivers do not flow up hill!"

There is a movie depicting the creation, the flood and the fall of man, which fast-forwards from a lush Garden of Eden to a New York City traffic jam.

There are no mechanized rides at Dinosaur Adventure Land — no creationist-themed roller coasters, scramblers or even a ferris wheel — but instead, a simple discovery center and museum and about a dozen outdoor games, each of which has a "science lesson" and "spiritual lesson" posted nearby. A group of about 60 parents and home-schooled children who visited Wednesday, including the Passmores, spent all afternoon trying the games, which promote religious faith more than creationist tenets.

Take Jumpasaurus, which involves jumping on a trampoline while trying to throw a ball through a hoop as many times as possible in a minute. The science lesson: "You will use coordination in this game, which means you will be doing more than one thing at once." The spiritual lesson, according to Mr. Johnson: "You need to learn to be coordinated for Jesus Christ so you can get more things done for him."

Somewhat more creationist in approach is the Nerve-Wracking Ball: a bowling ball on a rope, dangling from a tall tree branch. A child stands before the ball, and then a park guide gives it a shove from a specific angle, so that it comes careering back at the child's face only to stop just in front of it. The child wins if he does not flinch, proving he has "faith in God's laws" — in this case, that a swinging object will never come back higher than the point from which it took off.

Eugenie Scott, executive director of the National Center for Science Education, which tracks creationist programs, said traditional creationists like Mr. Hovind had in fact given up on building intellectual credibility years ago.

"They have been going the grass-roots mainstream route for at least 20 years," she said. "So I'm not surprised they are the ones sponsoring group vacations and theme parks and things like that."

Dinosaur Adventure Land, tucked behind a highway lined with car dealerships in this metropolitan area of 425,000, sits next to Mr. Hovind's home and the offices of Creation Science Evangelism, which he said he founded in 1989. Mr. Hovind is well known in Pensacola, and even in a region where religious billboards almost outnumber commercial ones he is controversial. Escambia County sued him in 2000 after he refused to get a $50 permit before building his theme park, saying the government had no authority over a church.

Just last week Internal Revenue Service agents used a search warrant to remove financial documents from Mr. Hovind's home and offices, saying he was not paying taxes and had neither a business license nor tax-exempt status for his enterprises.

Mr. Hovind did not want to discuss the I.R.S. investigation, saying only, "I don't have any tax obligations."

The man who calls himself Dr. Dino is also controversial among creationists, some of whom say he discredits their movement with some of his pseudo-scientific claims. Mr. Hovind got into a dispute in 2002 with Answers in Genesis, when he took issue with an article it published called "Arguments We Think Creationists Should Not Use." One such argument was that footprints found in Texas proved that man and dinosaurs coexisted; Mr. Hovind said he considered the argument, now abandoned by many creationists, valid. Mr. Hovind said he gave 700 lectures a year and that 38,000 people had visited his park, at $7 a head. According to a map that invites visitors to pinpoint their hometown, most come from the Florida Panhandle and from Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee.

Rachel Painter, camp director at the Alpha Omega Institute, which runs several creationist family summer camps in Colorado, said creationist vacations had gained popularity as the number of Christian home-schooling families had grown. The institute started its camps 18 years ago with 4 families per session, she said, but now up to 18 attend each, and from more states.

Wade and Joan Killingsworth, who belong to a home-schooling coalition called Solid Rock Christian School, said they took their children to Colonial Williamsburg over spring break and came to Dinosaur Adventure Land because it was similarly educational. But they and the Passmores, who traveled from Alabama with eight minivans of like-minded families, said this type of road trip had far more to offer.

"We've been to museums, discovery centers, where you have to sit there and take the evolutionary stuff," Mr. Passmore said. "It feels good for them to finally hear it in a public place, something that reinforces their beliefs."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: creationism; crevo; crevolist; dinosaurs; evolution; hovind; themepark
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Mr. Hovind did not want to discuss the I.R.S. investigation, saying only, "I don't have any tax obligations."

Auditopteryx strikes again...

1 posted on 04/30/2004 10:41:37 PM PDT by general_re
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To: PatrickHenry
Plink.
2 posted on 04/30/2004 10:42:26 PM PDT by general_re (Drive offensively - the life you save may be your own.)
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To: general_re
This is going to be a good thread! going to get my adult beverage and cold pizza
3 posted on 04/30/2004 10:43:22 PM PDT by cyborg
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To: cyborg
LOL - I'm guessing not much will happen tonight, but check back in the morning ;)
4 posted on 04/30/2004 10:44:23 PM PDT by general_re (Drive offensively - the life you save may be your own.)
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To: general_re
good idea *LOL*
5 posted on 04/30/2004 10:47:58 PM PDT by cyborg
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To: general_re
Creationism is one thing. Intellectual dishonesty (i.e., still insisting that the world is only a few thousand years old) is quite another.
6 posted on 04/30/2004 10:49:10 PM PDT by MegaSilver (Training a child in red diapers is the cruelest and most unusual form of abuse.)
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To: general_re
...38,000 people had visited his park, at $7 a head.

That's a gross of $266,000. Plus who-knows-how-much from sales of books, videos, souvenirs, lecture fees, and so forth. Sure must be nice to not "have any tax obligations"...

7 posted on 04/30/2004 10:52:33 PM PDT by general_re (Drive offensively - the life you save may be your own.)
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To: MegaSilver
From your lips... ;)
8 posted on 04/30/2004 10:52:48 PM PDT by general_re (Drive offensively - the life you save may be your own.)
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To: general_re
Well, freedom means that the ignorant can go to Mr. Hovind's park and live in their fantasy world. Oh well.
9 posted on 04/30/2004 10:53:33 PM PDT by Central Scrutiniser (Sometimes getting some ain't worth having to sit through a Julia Robberts film.)
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To: general_re
From your lips... ;)

...

10 posted on 04/30/2004 10:55:29 PM PDT by MegaSilver (Training a child in red diapers is the cruelest and most unusual form of abuse.)
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To: general_re
Where's the "Oh, Jeez...not the sh!t again" guy?
11 posted on 04/30/2004 10:57:21 PM PDT by The Radical Capitalist
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To: general_re
There is a similar attraction in Glen Rose, TX, south of Dallas. I believe it is called a creationist museum.
12 posted on 04/30/2004 11:29:39 PM PDT by Buck W.
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To: general_re
Don't have to pay taxes when you are bankrupt!
13 posted on 04/30/2004 11:44:23 PM PDT by Wacka
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To: Central Scrutiniser
Let's shrink God down to the size of one single book, written by a select set of people whose understanding was that of shepherds and fishermen; let's ignore everything else we've learned about Him from His actual creations, and be sure, while we're at it, never never never to learn any math that might tend to confuse us. Get beyond pre-algebra, and you might get into trouble. You might find yourself running into questions that can't be answered with that single book.

"Bible? We've got a Bible. We don't need ANYTHING else, including open eyelids."

There's no scientific notation if you confine yourself to the cubit. (I'm surprised that there hasn't been a fundamentalist movement to send us back to Biblical weights and measures.) Carbon dating? Now God wouldn't make anything so inconvenient as isotopes. That would confuse us. They're so small we can't see 'em, so we can ignore what they tell us. Those atheist scientists are just trying to do the Devil's work, undermining the faith of true believers--who may have to actually think about their testimony and integrate it with physical reality, if they dare question the doctrine that all true human knowledge is in Just One Book (which was a primer in morality and history, never intended to teach EVERYTHING, but never mind that.)

And those stars, they're just stuck on there. They're not so far away at all if you assume Heaven has to be beyond them. Worlds around them? WHO wants to go looking for a church that has taught, all along, that there are other worlds out there around those faraway suns?

We're gonna spend eternity just floating on clouds playing harps and singing at the Throne. Yes. That's what we want. No family, no marriage, no friendship, no service, no progression. No learning. No making, no doing...just sitting and harping and playing a horn for variety. Yeah, that's a great eternity. Forget the majesty of active volcanic fields and the heinous doctrine of plate tectonics--we won't have any use for that stuff. Forget the joy of falling in love with a kitten, a new baby. Heaven doesn't need any of that stuff--we did mention the cloud thing? You get your own, all to yourself, for eternity! Unless of course you go to that other place.

Ignore the rest of this stuff God made. Can't fit dinosaurs on the cloud you know, so they're of no possible interest.

And the notion that God is always talking to us, telling us more about Himself and His world? Why, that's the most evil thought at all. Just keep going through your prayerbooks and scripted services. Stick to the safe stuff. Don't even venture to try to ask God Himself to help you understand how it all fits together. He might answer, and maybe the answer will require you to do a little work, including (gasp) math, even PHYSICS, and that's just too big a risk to take, isn't it?
14 posted on 05/01/2004 12:03:07 AM PDT by Triple Word Score (Meretriciousness Everywhere.)
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To: Triple Word Score
Too bad DUers can't see this thread. They think we all are fundamentalists who beat our women and follow the Bible to the letter.
15 posted on 05/01/2004 12:15:08 AM PDT by Democratshavenobrains
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To: Triple Word Score
Don't yell at me, I think Creationists are the ultimate in ignorant luddite idiocy. I prefer actual science instead of well worn mumbo jumb from pre-dark ages (lack of) thought.
16 posted on 05/01/2004 12:25:49 AM PDT by Central Scrutiniser (Sometimes getting some ain't worth having to sit through a Julia Robberts film.)
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To: Democratshavenobrains
A real fundamentalist would want the whole truth and nothing less. That however can't be had without accepting that creation is a testament (a remarkably coherent one) and that revelation is continuous.

If you confine yourself to one book, you believe in a God small and weak enough that you can control Him....
17 posted on 05/01/2004 12:29:06 AM PDT by Triple Word Score (Meretriciousness Everywhere.)
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To: Central Scrutiniser
Sorry, you just happened to be in the TO block when I went back into rant mode. :-) Nothing personal.

It's been almost a month since I was up to a good rant...!
18 posted on 05/01/2004 12:29:46 AM PDT by Triple Word Score (Meretriciousness Everywhere.)
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To: Triple Word Score
No big, I've done the same thing. I find the creationists to be incredibly ignorant, dogmatic folk, that refuse to take the barest attempt to explore the entire history of science, and as such, they paint themselves into corners that they can only get out of by claiming "it was a miracle!"

Bilge! God gave us a brain for a reason, TO THINK!, not to take literally some subjective 2000 year old document that was written to reflect the science of the times.

19 posted on 05/01/2004 12:33:59 AM PDT by Central Scrutiniser (Sometimes getting some ain't worth having to sit through a Julia Robberts film.)
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To: Triple Word Score
And a good rant it was!
20 posted on 05/01/2004 12:42:54 AM PDT by BykrBayb (5 minutes of prayer for Terri, every day at 11 a.m. EDT, until she's safe.)
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