Florida Passes “Anti-Science” Law

Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.

LOL the color of the sky at night? Which type of water, are you aware there is more than one? ^^^ my guess is mail order science degree from Mexico.


Water boils are various temperatures depending on altitude. Hutch is an ignorant cultist that thinks reciting dogma makes him smart.
 
Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.
Not to be a smart ass but water boils at 100c only at sea level. I can make water boil at temps as low as 26c. This is provable because we can repeat it and get consistent results.

Mans effect on the enviroment is a completely different can of worms. In order to accept their conclussions one must do it based on faith. It should not be taught as facts.

Sent from my SM-G920P using Tapatalk

It's obvious what standard I used when I said 100c , dope.
 
Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.


You don't know much about water do.you we are still learning.





The many mysteries of water



By David Robson and Michael Marshall

No liquid behaves quite as oddly as water. It exhibits a raft of unusual behaviours, many of which are essential for life as we know it. We list water’s peculiarities below.

In The strangest liquid, we look at how a controversial new theory could finally explain water’s weird behaviour. Here we explain how the theory could explain 10 of water’s behaviours – and then take a quick look at its many other peculiarities.

Read more: Martin Chaplin of London South Bank University has posted a much moredetailed and technical discussion of these anomalies.

Water’s mysteries
Picturing water as a liquid that can form two types of structure, one tetrahedral and the other disordered, could explain many of its unusual properties. Here are 10 of them.



Advertisement


Water is most dense at 4 °C

EXPLANATION: Heating reduces the number of ordered, tetrahedral structures in favour of a more disordered arrangement in which molecules are more densely packed. However, the heat also agitates the molecules in the disordered regions, causing them to move further apart. Above 4 °C, this effect takes precedence, making the water less dense

Water has an exceptionally high specific heat capacity: it takes a lot of heat energy to raise water’s temperature by a given amount

EXPLANATION: Much of the extra heat energy is used to convert more molecules from the tetrahedral structures to the disordered structures, rather than into increasing the kinetic energy of the molecules, and hence the temperature.

Specific heat capacity is at a minimum at 35 °C but increases as the temperature falls or rises, whereas the heat capacity of most other liquids rises continuously with temperature.

EXPLANATION: Between 0 and 35 °C, increasing the temperature steadily removes regions of ordered, tetrahedral structure, reducing water’s ability to absorb heat. Above 35 °C, so few of the tetrahedral regions are left that water behaves like a regular liquid.

Water’s compressibility drops with increasing temperature until it reaches a minimum at 46 °C, whereas in most liquids, the compressibility rises continuously with temperature

EXPLANATION: As the temperature rises, the dense, disordered regions become more prevalent, and these are more difficult to compress. However, rising temperature also forces molecules within these regions further apart and hence makes them more compressible. This effect takes precedence beyond 46 °C.

Water is particularly difficult to compress

EXPLANATION: The strong attraction between water molecules keeps them more closely packed than the molecules of many other liquids.

This effect is particularly marked when the higher-density disordered structure dominates

The speed of sound in water increases with temperature up to 74 °C, after which it starts to fall again

EXPLANATION: This is the result of the interplay between water’s unusual density and compressibility profiles, which directly stem from the changing balance between the two types of structure.

Water molecules diffuse more easily, not less easily, at higher pressures

EXPLANATION: High pressure converts more molecules to the disordered structure, in which they are more mobile.

Unlike many liquids, water becomes less viscous, not more viscous, at higher pressures

EXPLANATION: Molecules are freer to move when in the disordered structures, which are favoured at higher pressures, than when they are in the ordered, tetrahedral structure.

Increasing the pressure increases the amount by which water expands on heating

EXPLANATION: Rising temperature causes disordered regions to expand more rapidly than ordered, tetrahedral ones, and high pressure favours fluctuations to the disordered regions.

Properties such as viscosity, boiling point and melting point are significantly different in “heavy” water – made from the heavier hydrogen isotopes deuterium and tritium – compared with their equivalents in normal water.

EXPLANATION: The heavier isotopes change the quantum mechanical properties of water molecules, altering the balance of the disordered and tetrahedral regions.

Phase anomalies
Water has an unusually high melting/freezing point.

Water has an unusually high boiling point.

Water has an unusually high critical point. This is the temperature at which the distinct liquid and gas states cease to exist. Instead, there is only a supercritical fluid, which can diffuse through solids just like a gas but also dissolve things just like a liquid. Water’s critical point is at a temperature of 374 °C and a pressure of 217 atmospheres: above this temperature, it is a supercritical fluid.

Solid water exists in a wider variety of stable (and metastable) crystal and amorphous structures than other materials.

The thermal conductivity of ice falls with increasing pressure.

The structure of liquid water changes at high pressure.

Supercooled water – that is, water that has been cooled below its freezing point without it becoming a solid – behaves strangely. It has two phases and a second critical point at about -91°C.

Liquid water is easy to supercool, but difficult to turn into a glass-like solid.

Liquid water exists at very low temperatures and freezes on heating.

Liquid water may be easily superheated: that is, heated to a temperature above its boiling point without it boiling.

Hot water may freeze faster than cold water– the Mpemba effect.

Warm water vibrates longer than cold water.

Density anomalies
The density of ice increases on heating (up to a temperature of -203 °C). Normally, solids expand and become less dense when heated.

Water shrinks on melting, when most substances expand.

Pressure reduces ice’s melting point, when it normally increases it: pressure normally encourages a substance to become a solid.

Liquid water has a high density that increases on heating (up to 3.984 °C). Heating a liquid normally causes it to expand, reducing its density.

The surface of water is denser than the bulk. This may be because the density of the surface water does not vary with temperature as the density of the bulk does.

Pressure reduces the temperature of maximum density.

There is a minimum in the density of supercooled water.

Water has a low thermal expansivity: for a given increase in temperature, it does not expand as much as it might be expected to.

Water’s thermal expansivity decreases at low temperatures. Below 4 °C, it becomes negative – so if you heat water that is below this temperature, it will shrink.

The number of nearest neighbours that each water molecule has increases on melting. Normally, because the molecules of a liquid are moving around so much more, any one molecule is likely to have fewer nearest neighbours than if it were part of a solid.

The number of nearest neighbours increases with temperature. This happens because the increasing temperatures break down the hydrogen bond network holding the molecules in place, allowing them to move closer to each other.

There is a maximum in the compressibility-temperature relationship, probably near the temperature at which the density is lowest.

The speed of sound may show a minimum.

High-frequency sounds travel as “fast sound”, because for these frequencies water behaves as if it is a glassy solid rather than a liquid. Water also shows a discontinuity at higher pressure, probably as a result of the water molecules rearranging themselves.

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin-lattice relaxation time is very small at low temperatures. In other words, if the nuclei of the atoms making up water are excited to a higher energy level – for instance by a magnetic field – they return to their previous, lower energy level unusually fast.

The NMR shift increases to a maximum at low (supercool) temperatures.

The refractive index of water – that is, how much light is slowed down, and thus deflected, when it enters water – has a maximum value at just below 0 °C.

The change in volume as liquid water changes to gas is unusually large.

You go and discover the mysteries of water.
Boil water at sea level 1,000 times and report your findings, dope.

You truly are a fucking retard, cult boi.

Reciting dogma from your cult does not make up for your abject ignorance.
 
Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.


You don't know much about water do.you we are still learning.





The many mysteries of water



By David Robson and Michael Marshall

No liquid behaves quite as oddly as water. It exhibits a raft of unusual behaviours, many of which are essential for life as we know it. We list water’s peculiarities below.

In The strangest liquid, we look at how a controversial new theory could finally explain water’s weird behaviour. Here we explain how the theory could explain 10 of water’s behaviours – and then take a quick look at its many other peculiarities.

Read more: Martin Chaplin of London South Bank University has posted a much moredetailed and technical discussion of these anomalies.

Water’s mysteries
Picturing water as a liquid that can form two types of structure, one tetrahedral and the other disordered, could explain many of its unusual properties. Here are 10 of them.



Advertisement


Water is most dense at 4 °C

EXPLANATION: Heating reduces the number of ordered, tetrahedral structures in favour of a more disordered arrangement in which molecules are more densely packed. However, the heat also agitates the molecules in the disordered regions, causing them to move further apart. Above 4 °C, this effect takes precedence, making the water less dense

Water has an exceptionally high specific heat capacity: it takes a lot of heat energy to raise water’s temperature by a given amount

EXPLANATION: Much of the extra heat energy is used to convert more molecules from the tetrahedral structures to the disordered structures, rather than into increasing the kinetic energy of the molecules, and hence the temperature.

Specific heat capacity is at a minimum at 35 °C but increases as the temperature falls or rises, whereas the heat capacity of most other liquids rises continuously with temperature.

EXPLANATION: Between 0 and 35 °C, increasing the temperature steadily removes regions of ordered, tetrahedral structure, reducing water’s ability to absorb heat. Above 35 °C, so few of the tetrahedral regions are left that water behaves like a regular liquid.

Water’s compressibility drops with increasing temperature until it reaches a minimum at 46 °C, whereas in most liquids, the compressibility rises continuously with temperature

EXPLANATION: As the temperature rises, the dense, disordered regions become more prevalent, and these are more difficult to compress. However, rising temperature also forces molecules within these regions further apart and hence makes them more compressible. This effect takes precedence beyond 46 °C.

Water is particularly difficult to compress

EXPLANATION: The strong attraction between water molecules keeps them more closely packed than the molecules of many other liquids.

This effect is particularly marked when the higher-density disordered structure dominates

The speed of sound in water increases with temperature up to 74 °C, after which it starts to fall again

EXPLANATION: This is the result of the interplay between water’s unusual density and compressibility profiles, which directly stem from the changing balance between the two types of structure.

Water molecules diffuse more easily, not less easily, at higher pressures

EXPLANATION: High pressure converts more molecules to the disordered structure, in which they are more mobile.

Unlike many liquids, water becomes less viscous, not more viscous, at higher pressures

EXPLANATION: Molecules are freer to move when in the disordered structures, which are favoured at higher pressures, than when they are in the ordered, tetrahedral structure.

Increasing the pressure increases the amount by which water expands on heating

EXPLANATION: Rising temperature causes disordered regions to expand more rapidly than ordered, tetrahedral ones, and high pressure favours fluctuations to the disordered regions.

Properties such as viscosity, boiling point and melting point are significantly different in “heavy” water – made from the heavier hydrogen isotopes deuterium and tritium – compared with their equivalents in normal water.

EXPLANATION: The heavier isotopes change the quantum mechanical properties of water molecules, altering the balance of the disordered and tetrahedral regions.

Phase anomalies
Water has an unusually high melting/freezing point.

Water has an unusually high boiling point.

Water has an unusually high critical point. This is the temperature at which the distinct liquid and gas states cease to exist. Instead, there is only a supercritical fluid, which can diffuse through solids just like a gas but also dissolve things just like a liquid. Water’s critical point is at a temperature of 374 °C and a pressure of 217 atmospheres: above this temperature, it is a supercritical fluid.

Solid water exists in a wider variety of stable (and metastable) crystal and amorphous structures than other materials.

The thermal conductivity of ice falls with increasing pressure.

The structure of liquid water changes at high pressure.

Supercooled water – that is, water that has been cooled below its freezing point without it becoming a solid – behaves strangely. It has two phases and a second critical point at about -91°C.

Liquid water is easy to supercool, but difficult to turn into a glass-like solid.

Liquid water exists at very low temperatures and freezes on heating.

Liquid water may be easily superheated: that is, heated to a temperature above its boiling point without it boiling.

Hot water may freeze faster than cold water– the Mpemba effect.

Warm water vibrates longer than cold water.

Density anomalies
The density of ice increases on heating (up to a temperature of -203 °C). Normally, solids expand and become less dense when heated.

Water shrinks on melting, when most substances expand.

Pressure reduces ice’s melting point, when it normally increases it: pressure normally encourages a substance to become a solid.

Liquid water has a high density that increases on heating (up to 3.984 °C). Heating a liquid normally causes it to expand, reducing its density.

The surface of water is denser than the bulk. This may be because the density of the surface water does not vary with temperature as the density of the bulk does.

Pressure reduces the temperature of maximum density.

There is a minimum in the density of supercooled water.

Water has a low thermal expansivity: for a given increase in temperature, it does not expand as much as it might be expected to.

Water’s thermal expansivity decreases at low temperatures. Below 4 °C, it becomes negative – so if you heat water that is below this temperature, it will shrink.

The number of nearest neighbours that each water molecule has increases on melting. Normally, because the molecules of a liquid are moving around so much more, any one molecule is likely to have fewer nearest neighbours than if it were part of a solid.

The number of nearest neighbours increases with temperature. This happens because the increasing temperatures break down the hydrogen bond network holding the molecules in place, allowing them to move closer to each other.

There is a maximum in the compressibility-temperature relationship, probably near the temperature at which the density is lowest.

The speed of sound may show a minimum.

High-frequency sounds travel as “fast sound”, because for these frequencies water behaves as if it is a glassy solid rather than a liquid. Water also shows a discontinuity at higher pressure, probably as a result of the water molecules rearranging themselves.

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin-lattice relaxation time is very small at low temperatures. In other words, if the nuclei of the atoms making up water are excited to a higher energy level – for instance by a magnetic field – they return to their previous, lower energy level unusually fast.

The NMR shift increases to a maximum at low (supercool) temperatures.

The refractive index of water – that is, how much light is slowed down, and thus deflected, when it enters water – has a maximum value at just below 0 °C.

The change in volume as liquid water changes to gas is unusually large.

You go and discover the mysteries of water.
Boil water at sea level 1,000 times and report your findings, dope.

You truly are a fucking retard, cult boi.

Reciting dogma from your cult does not make up for your abject ignorance.

I thought you had an open mind. Afraid of the results?
 
.
Conservatives in Florida got their wish last Monday when their governor, Rick Scott signed a bill into law guaranteeing scientific facts taught in public schools can be challenged if they offend an individual’s personal beliefs.

Climate change tops the list of such facts denied by conservatives. But will they be as happy about this law when they find their homes waste-deep in seawater? Or, when they are finally forced to tread water 24/7 if they wish to remain in Florida?

The oceans ARE rising, and Florida’s conservatives will eventually discover how burying their head’s in the sand will have them drowning much sooner. This is going to make being a devoted Republican much, much more difficult.

Two Sad Ironies In Florida Passing Its 'Anti-Science' Law

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

View attachment 136518

Debating a conservative is like playing chess with a pigeon, they wander around the board aimlessly, sh!t on everything, and still believe they won. And they prove this over and over and over.





.
Kids SHOULD be encouraged to challenge scientific facts. Encourage them to do research and find out for themselves, or give them experiments that demonstrate the facts. That's far better than teaching them to accept everything uncritically just because a "scientist" said so.
Kids should also be free to challenge "religious facts", so they know they are all a scam.

Which is why we encourage them to ask honest questions and seek the answers.

I know this probably comes as a shock to you but most people who have genuine faith believe because they sought the Lord until He answered. The Holy Ghost teaches us the truth of all things.

^^^That
 
.
Conservatives in Florida got their wish last Monday when their governor, Rick Scott signed a bill into law guaranteeing scientific facts taught in public schools can be challenged if they offend an individual’s personal beliefs.

Climate change tops the list of such facts denied by conservatives. But will they be as happy about this law when they find their homes waste-deep in seawater? Or, when they are finally forced to tread water 24/7 if they wish to remain in Florida?

The oceans ARE rising, and Florida’s conservatives will eventually discover how burying their head’s in the sand will have them drowning much sooner. This is going to make being a devoted Republican much, much more difficult.

Two Sad Ironies In Florida Passing Its 'Anti-Science' Law

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

View attachment 136518

Debating a conservative is like playing chess with a pigeon, they wander around the board aimlessly, sh!t on everything, and still believe they won. And they prove this over and over and over.
.

There is a renewed effort in the US for fake Christians to try to impose Christian Sharia law on the rest of the population. In red states children don't go to school to learn facts, they go to learn how facts can't be right because they contradict Christian Sharia law.
Link?


Ever hear of Mike Pence? Or any of the other rabid right who have been waging war against rights, freedoms and the US Constition.

While the cheeto isn't christian or RW, he will happily pass any laws that put money in his pocket. Rabid RW bible thumpers are already taking advantage of that.


Sent from my iPad using USMessageBoard.com

When did mike pence become a liberal progressive?
 
Science is 100% correct to conservatives if it's a doctor or engineer building the bridge they travel over, but 100% wrong on anything that conflicts with their internal belief system.

And this is the great thing about science, it reveals reality which is not subject to anyone's internal interpretations except at the very cutting knife edge of exploration like the Big Bang and String Theory.

Physics for someone that adheres to this hardcore fundamentalist view of the world (and yes that excludes many Christians who actually accept scientific fact as fact and who just want to be left alone to practice their religion) is an opinion. As is chemistry, biology, paleontology, zoology, microbiology...

People that cling to their religion AND reject anything outside their religion are the problem. Normal people, regardless of their religion, trust a doctor knows something more than the patient when he prescribes something. Abnormal people are suspicious even of doctors and PH.D's which are doctors in a field other than medicine. And it is these arrogantly ignorant people that are the most determined to force their religion on the rest of society. Why? Because their faith is shaky. They NEED society to reflect back to them that THEY are right and ok and when society doesn't do that they refuse to change their beliefs and instead force their beliefs on that society whenever they gain power.
 
Last edited:
Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.
Here's another fact: globull warming is a con.


It's the Volcano god fraud.

When the shaman of the village walked out and saw smoke rising from the nearby volcano, he declared to the villagers that the gods were angry, and that if they didn't sacrifice their virgin daughters for he and the other shamans to rape and them murder, then the volcano god would destroy not only them, but the entire village.

Now, the volcano was real enough, but the shaman had no fucking idea how it worked and sure couldn't control it, he merely cashed in on the fear of the ignorant masses.

So it is with global warming, We have warming, at least we did through 1999, but the AGW Church has no fucking clue how it works, and they sure the fuck can't control it. This is just the frauds fleecing the stupid, and Hutch is about as stupid as a person can be.
 
Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.
Not to be a smart ass but water boils at 100c only at sea level. I can make water boil at temps as low as 26c. This is provable because we can repeat it and get consistent results.

Mans effect on the enviroment is a completely different can of worms. In order to accept their conclussions one must do it based on faith. It should not be taught as facts.

Sent from my SM-G920P using Tapatalk

It's obvious what standard I used when I said 100c , dope.

Actually no. Nothing you don't say is obvious
 
.
Conservatives in Florida got their wish last Monday when their governor, Rick Scott signed a bill into law guaranteeing scientific facts taught in public schools can be challenged if they offend an individual’s personal beliefs.

Climate change tops the list of such facts denied by conservatives. But will they be as happy about this law when they find their homes waste-deep in seawater? Or, when they are finally forced to tread water 24/7 if they wish to remain in Florida?

The oceans ARE rising, and Florida’s conservatives will eventually discover how burying their head’s in the sand will have them drowning much sooner. This is going to make being a devoted Republican much, much more difficult.

Two Sad Ironies In Florida Passing Its 'Anti-Science' Law

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

View attachment 136518

Debating a conservative is like playing chess with a pigeon, they wander around the board aimlessly, sh!t on everything, and still believe they won. And they prove this over and over and over.





.
So you want to FORCE people to believe YOUR beliefs...thought you clowns were all about freedom?
No one wants to FORCE you to believe the facts. However, I believe we have a right to want our decisions based on good solid facts rather than foolishness to support the Orange Menace.
You have a right to believe what you want,You DO NOT have the right to force them on anyone.
Decisions on environmental issues should be based on facts. One doesn't choose to "believe" facts; they are not supposed to be viewed as opinions. In this country, our decisions that will impact the future and how to prepare for a warming planet and the changes that is bringing and will bring more of need to be as fact based as possible or we will make a mistake.
Don't treat scientific facts as if they were an opinion on which is the best movie. Or the best religion. That is a really frightening stance.

Don't you know? It's not proven that human organs can be transplanted to another. Or that parts of the electromagnetic spectrum can be modulated so as to carry information that can be received and decoded remotely.

This is all very much theory.

Cell phones will fail because it's not proven science.
 
.
Conservatives in Florida got their wish last Monday when their governor, Rick Scott signed a bill into law guaranteeing scientific facts taught in public schools can be challenged if they offend an individual’s personal beliefs.

Climate change tops the list of such facts denied by conservatives. But will they be as happy about this law when they find their homes waste-deep in seawater? Or, when they are finally forced to tread water 24/7 if they wish to remain in Florida?

The oceans ARE rising, and Florida’s conservatives will eventually discover how burying their head’s in the sand will have them drowning much sooner. This is going to make being a devoted Republican much, much more difficult.

Two Sad Ironies In Florida Passing Its 'Anti-Science' Law

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________

View attachment 136518

Debating a conservative is like playing chess with a pigeon, they wander around the board aimlessly, sh!t on everything, and still believe they won. And they prove this over and over and over.
.

There is a renewed effort in the US for fake Christians to try to impose Christian Sharia law on the rest of the population. In red states children don't go to school to learn facts, they go to learn how facts can't be right because they contradict Christian Sharia law. Conservatives are quickly triggered into quivering lip syndrome whenever their religion is made to look silly by facts. So they use government power to force people to ignore facts. Problem solved. This is exactly why the founders knew the government and the church HAD to be separated.
Well the founders opened session with prayer, which is still done I believe, sent bibles to the troops, etc.

John Adams said:
"We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry, would break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes throAnd let us with caution indulge the supposition, that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.{2}ugh a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."{1}

And a guy named George Washington upon leaving office:
"And let us with caution indulge the supposition, that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle."{2}

And:
John Jay was one of the authors of the Federalist Papers and became America’s first Supreme Court Justice. He also served as the president of the American Bible Society. He understood the relationship between government and Christian values. He said, “Providence has given to our people the choice of their rulers, and it is the duty, as well as the privilege and interest of our Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their rulers.”{7}

So like many (most leftists?) you have no clue about our history. Or science for that matter. Your politico-religious world views are all you know or care about.
 
That's the way one learns. Not by shutting down discussion.
Students should question things they are skeptical about,

Except by definition, the student doesn't know shit.

Maybe a left tard's child. Three honor students here, you don't get that for not knowimg shit

Only because they FOLLOWED the curriculum, dope.

You obviously are not nor ever was a honor student. Ours also attend private schools. It's a joy to watch when they debate public school children. They are light years ahead of them. They haven't been indoctrinated, they know how to think on their own
 
Facts cannot be challenged.

The sky is blue and water boils at 100c. Period.
I'm showing this because the "global warming" community seems to have difficulty with simple arithmetic .
In summary the expert says 353 billion trees would cover 24% of the earth. So that would mean 100% of the earth surface would be covered by 4 times 353 billion
or about 1.4 trillion trees. Yet some others say we already have 3 trillion trees. You "scientific" types... explain the simple math that seems the experts can't agree on!
Oh and also explain how with 1.6 trillion trees absorbing ALL the CO2 emitted we have a problem?

View attachment 136521

You have problem with simple truths.
This is fact.



That maybe the case but I can do simple math. That is if the "global warming" expert says 353 billion trees would cover 24% of the Earth that would mean
4 times 353 billion is 1.4 trillion trees. But other "scientists" say there are already 3 Trillion trees and maybe 10 times that!
So you tell me who should I believe?
 
"I believe a magic being flies through the air and created everything and any evidence that proves that wrong has to be wrong, obviously"

"I have proof that the sun is 93 million miles from Earth, the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, the universe is 13.72 billion years old, the Earth is round, and men evolved from apes when one of our chromosomes fused and we went from having 48 chromosomes which apes have, to having 46 chromosomes which humans have."

"Well I don't believe any of that but let's debate it ok?"

"These things are proven already, the rigorous debate took place during the last 100 years between PH.D's in each field of study."

"Oh they don't know anything, I do because I say I do. And in America my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."

"No, you are free to be ignorant, but you aren't free to force that ignorance to be taught to children. The Flat Earth Society is meeting this week near you, why don't you go and 'debate them' about their beliefs. Certainly you would say their beliefs are just as valid as yours yes? Good, have fun!"


The earth is not round you stupid fuck

The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel


And where is the proof monkey boy we evolved from apes?


..
 

Forum List

Back
Top