tas8831
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- May 5, 2017
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That would make sense - as is the norm, creationists are embellishing the 'bias' part of all this. The case was settled (which, despite the appearance, is often done to avoid lengthy court cases - a family friend (ortho surgeon) used to settle malpractice suits all the time just to avoid having to drag things out in court - to include one time when a guy sued because he was not able to play tennis after his operation... even though he had never played tennis before...), yet creationist groups tout it as a "victory" and "proof" of the bias against poor honest, er, I mean, sleazy tricky creationists.Your mention of a "tusk" also suggests to me which claim your acquaintance related to you. Non-scientist Mark Armitage claims to have found a triceratops horn with soft tissue on it which "debunks Darwinism". This claim has numerous problems.
1. He hasn't allowed any non-Creationist to examine the supposed horn.
2. We know that there are ways of preserving soft tissue fragments for very long times.
3. The Cretaceous 'triceratops horn' is actually a Pleistocene bison horn.
the facts of the case show something other than his evolution-disproving claims.
Plus he was not an actual professor, but a technician...
I found one article about it, and I liked this:
The professor allegedly entered Armitage's office and said, “We are not going to tolerate your religion in this department.”
Sounds like it was written by the guy that wrote those stupid "God's Not Dead" movies...
Plus he wasn't "fired", his contract was not renewed.
For another view, there is this:
Mark Armitage
"A lawsuit was filed and the Judge threw out 3 out of 5 allegations before the trial was scheduled, including the one where Armitage says he was fired for writing the paper. The Judge also ruled he would not be eligible for punitive damages on the remaining charges, so Armitage took an offer to settle out of court instead of going forward with his case. It is often more cost effective for a defendant to settle in this way instead of going to trial, and it is not an admission of guilt."
There is also the case of Jerry Bergman, who was denied tenure at Ball State (I think). He claimed religious discrimination - to his creationist pals. But he said it was 'anti-white discrimination' in an interview with David Duke.
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