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Harryk December 20th 10 09:00 PM

The 40% Anchor
 
A new Gallup poll, released Dec. 17, reveals that 40 percent of
Americans still believe that humans were created by God **within the
last 10,000 years.** This number is slightly down from a previous high
of 47 percent in 1993 and 1999.

Another 38 percent of respondents believe that humans have evolved from
more basic organisms but with God playing a role in the process.

A mere 16 percent of respondents subscribed to the belief of "secular
evolution": that humans have evolved with no divine guidance. However,
this number has nearly doubled from nine percent of respondents in a
poll from 1982.

The poll also revealed that beliefs in creationism and evolution are
strongly related to levels of education attained. When results are
narrowed to those with college degrees, only 37 percent of respondents
maintain beliefs in creationism. Meanwhile, the belief in evolution
without the aid of God rises to 21 percent.

With regards to political affiliation, a majority of Republicans (52
percent) subscribe to creationist beliefs. This is compared to only 34
percent among Democrats and Independents.

Views on human origins vary based on church attendance. Of those who
attend church on a weekly basis, 60 percent believe in creationism while
a mere 2 percent subscribe to "secular evolution".

These numbers are flipped among those who rarely or never attend
religious services. In this group, only 24 percent believe in
creationism while 39 percent believe in evolution without divine
guidance. This represents the only subset of data reported where
"secular evolution" beats out creationism.

- - -

"...within the last 10,000 years..."

What a crock.


Paul@BYC[_2_] December 20th 10 10:15 PM

The 40% Anchor
 
On 12/20/2010 4:00 PM, Harryk wrote:
A new Gallup poll, released Dec. 17, reveals that 40 percent of
Americans still believe that humans were created by God **within the
last 10,000 years.** This number is slightly down from a previous high
of 47 percent in 1993 and 1999.

Another 38 percent of respondents believe that humans have evolved from
more basic organisms but with God playing a role in the process.

A mere 16 percent of respondents subscribed to the belief of "secular
evolution": that humans have evolved with no divine guidance. However,
this number has nearly doubled from nine percent of respondents in a
poll from 1982.

The poll also revealed that beliefs in creationism and evolution are
strongly related to levels of education attained. When results are
narrowed to those with college degrees, only 37 percent of respondents
maintain beliefs in creationism. Meanwhile, the belief in evolution
without the aid of God rises to 21 percent.

With regards to political affiliation, a majority of Republicans (52
percent) subscribe to creationist beliefs. This is compared to only 34
percent among Democrats and Independents.

Views on human origins vary based on church attendance. Of those who
attend church on a weekly basis, 60 percent believe in creationism while
a mere 2 percent subscribe to "secular evolution".

These numbers are flipped among those who rarely or never attend
religious services. In this group, only 24 percent believe in
creationism while 39 percent believe in evolution without divine
guidance. This represents the only subset of data reported where
"secular evolution" beats out creationism.

- - -

"...within the last 10,000 years..."

What a crock.



Everyone needs a little superstition in their lives.

L G[_11_] December 21st 10 02:03 AM

The 40% Anchor
 
Paul@BYC wrote:
On 12/20/2010 4:00 PM, Harryk wrote:
A new Gallup poll, released Dec. 17, reveals that 40 percent of
Americans still believe that humans were created by God **within the
last 10,000 years.** This number is slightly down from a previous high
of 47 percent in 1993 and 1999.

Another 38 percent of respondents believe that humans have evolved from
more basic organisms but with God playing a role in the process.

A mere 16 percent of respondents subscribed to the belief of "secular
evolution": that humans have evolved with no divine guidance. However,
this number has nearly doubled from nine percent of respondents in a
poll from 1982.

The poll also revealed that beliefs in creationism and evolution are
strongly related to levels of education attained. When results are
narrowed to those with college degrees, only 37 percent of respondents
maintain beliefs in creationism. Meanwhile, the belief in evolution
without the aid of God rises to 21 percent.

With regards to political affiliation, a majority of Republicans (52
percent) subscribe to creationist beliefs. This is compared to only 34
percent among Democrats and Independents.

Views on human origins vary based on church attendance. Of those who
attend church on a weekly basis, 60 percent believe in creationism while
a mere 2 percent subscribe to "secular evolution".

These numbers are flipped among those who rarely or never attend
religious services. In this group, only 24 percent believe in
creationism while 39 percent believe in evolution without divine
guidance. This represents the only subset of data reported where
"secular evolution" beats out creationism.

- - -

"...within the last 10,000 years..."

What a crock.



Everyone needs a little superstition in their lives.

It's OT, bozo.

jps December 21st 10 07:20 AM

The 40% Anchor
 
On Mon, 20 Dec 2010 16:00:21 -0500, Harryk
wrote:

A new Gallup poll, released Dec. 17, reveals that 40 percent of
Americans still believe that humans were created by God **within the
last 10,000 years.** This number is slightly down from a previous high
of 47 percent in 1993 and 1999.

Another 38 percent of respondents believe that humans have evolved from
more basic organisms but with God playing a role in the process.

A mere 16 percent of respondents subscribed to the belief of "secular
evolution": that humans have evolved with no divine guidance. However,
this number has nearly doubled from nine percent of respondents in a
poll from 1982.

The poll also revealed that beliefs in creationism and evolution are
strongly related to levels of education attained. When results are
narrowed to those with college degrees, only 37 percent of respondents
maintain beliefs in creationism. Meanwhile, the belief in evolution
without the aid of God rises to 21 percent.

With regards to political affiliation, a majority of Republicans (52
percent) subscribe to creationist beliefs. This is compared to only 34
percent among Democrats and Independents.

Views on human origins vary based on church attendance. Of those who
attend church on a weekly basis, 60 percent believe in creationism while
a mere 2 percent subscribe to "secular evolution".

These numbers are flipped among those who rarely or never attend
religious services. In this group, only 24 percent believe in
creationism while 39 percent believe in evolution without divine
guidance. This represents the only subset of data reported where
"secular evolution" beats out creationism.

- - -

"...within the last 10,000 years..."

What a crock.


An indicator of the distance travelled by our species since the dark
ages. Really quite astonishing.

Expect there are significant numbesr of countries wayr ahead of the US
where distance from Taliban mentality is the measure.

jps December 21st 10 07:23 AM

The 40% Anchor
 
On Mon, 20 Dec 2010 21:03:19 -0500, L G wrote:

Paul@BYC wrote:
On 12/20/2010 4:00 PM, Harryk wrote:
A new Gallup poll, released Dec. 17, reveals that 40 percent of
Americans still believe that humans were created by God **within the
last 10,000 years.** This number is slightly down from a previous high
of 47 percent in 1993 and 1999.

Another 38 percent of respondents believe that humans have evolved from
more basic organisms but with God playing a role in the process.

A mere 16 percent of respondents subscribed to the belief of "secular
evolution": that humans have evolved with no divine guidance. However,
this number has nearly doubled from nine percent of respondents in a
poll from 1982.

The poll also revealed that beliefs in creationism and evolution are
strongly related to levels of education attained. When results are
narrowed to those with college degrees, only 37 percent of respondents
maintain beliefs in creationism. Meanwhile, the belief in evolution
without the aid of God rises to 21 percent.

With regards to political affiliation, a majority of Republicans (52
percent) subscribe to creationist beliefs. This is compared to only 34
percent among Democrats and Independents.

Views on human origins vary based on church attendance. Of those who
attend church on a weekly basis, 60 percent believe in creationism while
a mere 2 percent subscribe to "secular evolution".

These numbers are flipped among those who rarely or never attend
religious services. In this group, only 24 percent believe in
creationism while 39 percent believe in evolution without divine
guidance. This represents the only subset of data reported where
"secular evolution" beats out creationism.

- - -

"...within the last 10,000 years..."

What a crock.



Everyone needs a little superstition in their lives.


It's OT, bozo.


You putrid little bitch. You told me to **** off and die for telling
Tim that his love note to Herring was OT and could be handled better
via any number of methods.

Time for you to head back to the bozo bin where you belong.

Bye, bye, lard ass!

Tim December 21st 10 11:58 AM

The 40% Anchor
 
Here, if your'e gonna mock religion especially Christianity, and those
who may believe in God the Creator, and Creation theology,then make it
worth your while...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ah7bj...eature=related

Harryk December 21st 10 12:14 PM

The 40% Anchor
 
On 12/21/10 6:58 AM, Tim wrote:
Here, if your'e gonna mock religion especially Christianity, and those
who may believe in God the Creator, and Creation theology,then make it
worth your while...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ah7bj...eature=related



If only there were something more than superstition, *especially* the
beliefs that man was "created" about 10,000 years ago, or that every
phrase in "the bible" should be taken literally.

Tim December 21st 10 12:28 PM

The 40% Anchor
 
On Dec 21, 6:14*am, Harryk wrote:
On 12/21/10 6:58 AM, Tim wrote:

Here, if your'e gonna mock religion especially Christianity, and those
who may believe in God the Creator, and Creation theology,then make it
worth your while...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ah7bj...eature=related


If only there were something more than superstition, *especially* the
beliefs that man was "created" about 10,000 years ago, or that every
phrase in "the bible" should be taken literally.


For an unbeliever whats it matter anyhow?

Ziggy®[_2_] December 21st 10 12:31 PM

The 40% Anchor
 
"Harryk" wrote in message m...
On 12/21/10 6:58 AM, Tim wrote:
Here, if your'e gonna mock religion especially Christianity, and those
who may believe in God the Creator, and Creation theology,then make it
worth your while...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ah7bj...eature=related



If only there were something more than superstition, *especially* the
beliefs that man was "created" about 10,000 years ago, or that every
phrase in "the bible" should be taken literally.


We understand that your family photo album is the only evidence you need to prove Darwin's theory.
What would a tree climber like you know about religion.
http://i52.tinypic.com/wa3nyf.jpg Are these your ancestors or offspring?







--
Ziggy®

Harryk December 21st 10 12:34 PM

The 40% Anchor
 
On 12/21/10 7:28 AM, Tim wrote:
On Dec 21, 6:14 am, wrote:
On 12/21/10 6:58 AM, Tim wrote:

Here, if your'e gonna mock religion especially Christianity, and those
who may believe in God the Creator, and Creation theology,then make it
worth your while...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ah7bj...eature=related


If only there were something more than superstition, *especially* the
beliefs that man was "created" about 10,000 years ago, or that every
phrase in "the bible" should be taken literally.


For an unbeliever whats it matter anyhow?



It matters because those who believe that myth try to force it and many
other religious superstitions onto my society.

I don't give a damn what the "creationists" believe, so long as they
keep their beliefs in their churches, in their homes, in their religious
schools. I don't want to see that crap (and it is crap) in public school
textbooks or being "taught" in public schools, or being pushed onto
society in general.

My suspicion is that overly religious christians are made nervous by
those who don't believe as they do and, like "the Borg," they feel a
need to assimilate everyone.


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