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Some Creationist Gets Owned

http://www.badscience.net/2008/06/all-time-classic-creationist-pwnage/

Biologist Richard Lenski recently published a paper describing the emergence of new traits in bacteria (they evolved the ability to metabolise new food sources when kept in an environment without food they could already metabolise). Andrew Schlafly, founder of that paragon of scientific endeavour Conservapedia [1] [2], got very upset by this and demanded to see the evidence. Lenski responded quite politely, but after further demands, threats, and insults, replies with an impressively snotty letter.

[1]He’s also, apparently, teacher of "one of the largest homeschool classes in the country"; isn’t that a contradiction of terms? When you’re teaching 58 kids, that’s not homeschool; that’s actual school; presumably, the claim to be "homeschool" is to avoid the necessity of teaching the kids actual science.
[2]Because we wouldn’t want people to actually correct Conservapedia, it’s actually very difficult to get to edit a page, despite the fact that it’s a wiki; for example, the page on Phyllis Schlafly, mother of Andrew, is locked, preventing people changing the statement from the (true but inaccurate) "a fraction of people present protested her honorary doctorate" to the more-accurate "a third of people present, etc."; this despite that the numbers in question are in a news report cited elsewhere in the article. Hurray for selective blindness to the facts!
Creationist Copyright

The generally-accepted (by insano-Christian types, anyway) date for the creation of the universe is Archbishop James Ussher’s calculation of September 22nd, 4004BC. This makes the universe 6011 years old as of last September.

Assuming a 90-year copyright, the universe would have passed into the public domain in September 3914BC, or 5922 years ago as of last September.

Traditional Hebrew calculations of the age of the universe are slightly more favourable, since they place the Creation at sometime in September/October 3761BC (can’t really be more accurate than that without more research on my part). However, this still would have the universe passing into the public domain in 3671BC.

Of course, this assumes that the copyright period is 90 years; obviously, if it’s 75 years then it’s even less favourable.

This also ignores the fact that the universe was written in Perl and Lisp, which suggests that God is in favour of free software; in fact, since he’s a Lisp hacker with an obvious interest in artificial intelligence, he probably has quite a bit in common with rms.