BEL's Doctrine Of Popularity for Evolutionists

* Special Episode of Real Science Radio: As also with atheists, and earning a place on our kgov.com/sayings page, "The most popular evolutionist is the one who can say the greatest absurdity with the straightest face." Ditto for leftists. On today's program, our test subjects are Hillary Clinton and Richard Dawkins. (See also a 2019 example below and our preemptive use of this test in our 2020 List of Ways Humans Differ from Animals.)

For the superfluous reasons for this doctrine see rsr.org/atheism and rsr.org/evolution. And please note, today's show aired not as an RSR program but as a typical Bob Enyart Live (i.e., Monday - Wednesday) show, but later we designated it as RSR because it highlights the D.O.P.E.

And here's the video that we aired Dawkin's audio from...

 

* Example of Bob's Saying: This Ellen McHenry cartoon illustrates Enyart's saying, "The most famous atheist is the one who can say the greatest absurdity with the straightest face. Ditto for evolutionists." From ScienceDaily and the Journal of Geology, Did ancient supernovae prompt human ancestors to walk upright? A paper in the Journal of Geology makes the case. Supernovae bombarded Earth with cosmic energy starting as many as 8 million years ago, with a peak some 2.6 million years ago...

Cartoon drawing of absurdity of latest atheist theory on how we learned to walk upright: Supernovas!

At RSR's Good Little Rat, Bad Little Bat show we covered another example of DOPE...

 Looks like a batmouseDiscover Magazine Thinks Mutated Finger Is A Big Step Toward Flight: Really! You just can't make this stuff up! Ha!! Real Science Radio co-hosts Bob Enyart and Fred Williams get a kick out of Discover Magazine claiming that a mouse with mutated fingers, "may have instigated the evolution of mammalian flight." Before pointing out why this sounds mickey mouse to us, first consider one of the many problems that evolutionists have, which Discover admits in their article: "The fossil records show a sudden appearance of mammals [i.e., bats, which are] nearly identical to modern bats about 50 million years ago—with no transitional forms." (And with all the variation that exists among modern bats, they could have just dropped the word "nearly" from their description of Darwin's problem.)