Under the corrupt cloak of a "book review," this Sunday's
Los Angeles Times (July 30, 2006) continues its underhanded and
one-sided assault on
the theory of intelligent design (ID).
"The
language of life," by
Robert Lee Hotz*, is a review of three new works that attack
intelligent design. The review was promoted on the top of the
front page of the "Sunday preview" edition under the heading,
"Less than 'intelligent design': Darwin's believers debunk the theory."
And rather than providing its readers an honest critique, the Times' "review" is
nothing less than a full-on Darwin propaganda piece. Hotz begins his
article as follows (emphasis/link mine),
In the border war between science and faith, the
doctrine of "intelligent design" is a sly subterfuge -
a
marzipan confection of an idea presented in the shape of
something more substantial.
As many now understand - and as a federal court
ruled in December - intelligent design is the bait on the
barbed hook of creationist belief ...
Objectivity? Forget it. You won't find it with Hotz.
Hotz' hit piece on ID then continues by haphazardly labeling ID as a "ruse," a "ploy," a "disingenuous masquerade,"
and "dishonesty."
Hotz claims the works he's reviewing are written by "some of the nation's most
distinguished thinkers." Well, one of the reviewed
books is by well-known "skeptic" Michael Shermer, whose
work has been cited numerous times for falsehoods and inaccuracy (for
example,
here,
here,
here, and
here)). Shermer has also floundered considerably while
defending Darwinism in public, as witnessed in a 2004 debate with Stephen Meyer on
TV's Faith Under Fire (link
with video). In 2005, Shermer struggled in a debate with
William Dembski (link/audio).
"Distinguished"? Sorry, Mr. Hotz.
As NewsBusters has already reported this year (link),
the Los Angeles Times has never published a single article
from a leading spokesperson of intelligent design theory.**
(Leading spokespeople would include names such as
Stephen Meyer,
William Dembski,
Michael
Behe,
Jonathan Wells,
Guillermo Gonzalez,
Jay Wesley Richards, and acclaimed writer
Lee
Strobel.) Yet the Times has now published its tenth
piece in the last 14 months attacking ID! (I'm using
this
count).
Is there balance at the Los Angeles Times on this
issue? Not even close, folks. The Times is unequivocally
disserving its readers. How many Times readers are aware that one
of the world's most renowned atheists,
Antony Flew,
has recently become open to God largely due to the persuasive science
of intelligent design?
* Hotz "covers science, medicine, and technology" for
the Times, yet Hotz has a B.A. in English and an M.A. in
theater history. Am I the only one to think it odd that the
Times would find him well qualified to write on science, medicine,
and technology?
** Stephen Meyer did co-author
a 1987 op-ed in the LA Times (almost 19 years ago)
on the subject of human rights; but the article does not delve into the
topic of intelligent design. In addition, there was
a book review in the Times over 8 years ago
(1998) by Edward McGlynn Gaffney, Jr. His review, about a book on the
1925 Scopes trial, included brief references to intelligent
design science. However, Gaffney's name would not be included among well-known proponents of ID.