I believe in God the creator. I believe in freedom. I believe in America, and the state of Ohio, and the Republican Party, fiscal conservatism, fairness and honesty. These values guided me last week to lead the Ohio Board of Education to remove creationism from our state's Science Standards and Model Curriculum.
You may ask: Why would being a creationist make me want to remove "critical analysis"/"intelligent design" creationism from the standards? It's simple, really: It is deeply unfair to the children of this state to mislead them about the nature of science. The future of Ohio's prosperity depends on a well-educated workforce that understands science. The future of religious freedom in this country depends on the electorate understanding that modern science is not a threat to faith....Our board had to decide whether to waste millions of taxpayer dollars to hear a federal judge tell them the same thing Judge Jones told the Dover, Pa., board. We chose to stand up for kids, for the state of Ohio, for freedom of religion, and for the integrity of science. The public trusts us to uphold first-class standards and to protect democracy and religious freedom. So, we set aside our differences and did the right thing for Ohio and Ohio's children.
Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, February 24, 2006
Conservative Ohio Board Member Defends Removing Intelligent Design
Conservative Republican Martha Wise was the leader in getting Ohio's Board of Education last week to remove references to Intelligent Design from Ohio's science curriculum standards. (See prior posting.) On Wednesday, she wrote a fascinating op-ed in the Cincinnati Enquirer: