As we have had ample opportunity to see, lunacy is no
hindrance to being elected as a US representative. But with regard to lunacy, Congress
is nothing compared to what you find in state legislatures. Georgia, for
instance, was for a dozen years (until 2008) plagued by the barely coherent
stupidity of Benjamin D. Bridges, Sr. (10th district).
In 2007, for instance, Bridges, who has no science background,
was criticized for circulating a memo condemning evolution and heliocentrism in
the Georgia legislature. The memo claimed that “[i]ndisputable evidence – long
hidden but now available to everyone – demonstrates conclusively that so-called
‘secular evolution science’ is the Big-Bang 15-billion-year alternate ‘creation
scenario’ of the Pharisee Religion …This scenario is derived
concept-for-concept from Rabbinic writings in the mystic ‘holy book’ Kabbala
dating back at least two millennia.” No, not the faintest trace of an even
cursory understanding of evolution, but the memo did direct readers to the
website of Marshal Hall’s young Earth creationist Fair Education Foundation, which claims the Earth is not rotating or orbiting
the Sun and denies the existence of any stars or exoplanets outside the solar
system (it also directed the reader to Gerardus Bouw’s website). Marshall Hall, by the way, was the husband of Bridges’ longtime
campaign manager, Bonnie Hall.
Bridges did claim that he had nothing to do with the memo,
but Hall stated that she had Bridges’s approval, and in any case Bridges
confimed that he did not necessarily disagree with its claims: “I agree with it
more than I would the Big Bang Theory or the Darwin Theory,” said Bridges. The
memo was later circulated in the Texas legislature by their resident
congressional idiot Warren Chisum.
Indeed, Bridges himself used the same sources for his own 2006 bill, HB 179, which would outlaw the teaching of evolution
because evolution is a Kabbalah-based religion: “Included here is documentation
which confirms that ‘evolution science’ is NOT ‘secular science’ as the Courts
have viewed it to be, but is, in fact, an alternate religious ‘creation
scenario’ which is derived concept for concept from the Kabbala, a mystic,
anti-Christ ‘holy book’ of the Pharisee Sect of Judaism.” What’s that evidence?
Glad you asked: “Nechunya ben HaKana, a 1st century Kabbalist asserted that if
you know how to use the 42 letter name for God you could decipher a lengthy
time between the creation of the universe and man. He estimated the age of the
Universe at 15.3 billion years, some 2000 years ago, the very age modern
astrophysics have just arrived at;” off by just 1.6 billion years, which I
suppose is nothing to people who believe that the Earth is 6000 years anyways.
But what does it have to do with evolution? Oh, you know: evolution, Big Bang,
communism, LGBT rights, gun control, people who disagree with him … it’s all
the same conspiracy, and it is targeted at good Christians like Bridges.
In any case, the source of the “evidence” is a collection of
ridiculously absurd claims by kabbala loons who claim that modern science has
confirmed their moronic religious speculations and hence that science is
actually a kabbala religion. Bridges’s advisors apparently took them seriously.
Note that not even Answers in Genesis wants to associate with people who think that science (including heliocentrism)
is a Jewish conspiracy.
It wasn’t Bridges’s first time campaigning on
pseudoscientific grounds. Also in 1999 and 2005 did he introduce legislation to have non-existent evidence against evolution being
taught in public schools. In 2005, Georgia Citizens for Integrity in Science
Education testified against his bill, causing Bridges to remark that he could have gotten “experts” as well, if he’d known that GCISE was going to
be there. It would actually have been fun to see him bring in his “experts” to
testify.
Diagnosis: Ok, so he’s not really in a position of power
anymore. He is still a fine example of the level of crazy you can achieve
without becoming unelectable.
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