Firing over creationism e-mail leads to appeal

It truly is amazing; the amount of time and energy spent by politicians, lawyers and government employees in this country discussing outlandish fallacies such as Creationism. The Christian relics who continue to push to teach this misguided, story-book concept to children in public schools, if they succeed, will send science education back 150 years. Next thing you know they’ll want alchemy taught in place of chemistry!

Isn’t it about time that politicians and the general public stop sucking-up to these nit-wit Christians who still believe in the Bible chapter and verse? They already teach these fairy tales to their children, who unfortunately for them are forced to attend Christian schools so they can be indoctrinated. We certainly don’t want all our children to be ignorant when it comes to science.

There is no place for the religious programming of children in public schools.  Children in public schools need to be taught science, not superstition. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press

By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN, Associated Press Writer Michael Kunzelman, Associated Press Writer Mon Apr 26, 6:37 pm ET

NEW ORLEANS – The former director of the science program for Texas’ public schools asked a federal appeals court Monday to revive a lawsuit over her firing for forwarding an e-mail about a forum opposed to teaching creationism.

The agency that runs Texas public schools argued that Christina Castillo Comer’s e-mail broke its policy of neutrality toward any potentially controversial issue, including creationism. A lawyer for Comer says the agency has an unwritten, unconstitutional policy of treating creationism as science.

A three-judge panel from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans heard arguments Monday in Comer’s lawsuit against Robert Scott, commissioner of the Texas Education Agency.

A federal judge in Austin, Texas, dismissed her claims in March 2009. Comer is appealing that decision. The 5th Circuit panel didn’t indicate when it will rule.

Comer says she was told to quit or be fired in 2007 after forwarding an e-mail about a presentation by a Southeastern Louisiana University philosophy professor viewed as opposed to teaching creationism in schools. Her only comment on the forwarded e-mail was “FYI.”

The agency says Comer violated her employer’s “neutrality” policy by airing her personal opposition to creationism.

Douglas Mishkin, a lawyer for Comer, said the agency’s neutrality policy violates the First Amendment’s establishment clause because it endorses a religious belief.

“It takes something that’s not science and treats it as if it is,” he said.

Judge Fortunato Benavides pressed Mishkin to explain how the agency violated the establishment clause.

“I can see a free speech claim,” the judge said. “This looks like to me a First Amendment claim in the robe of an establishment claim.”

James Ho, Texas’ solicitor general, said Comer doesn’t dispute that her e-mail violated the agency’s neutrality policy.

“This is a policy of employee neutrality, and neutrality is the touchstone of the establishment clause,” Ho said. “It’s certainly not a violation of it.”

The agency says Comer was fired for “repeated subordination.” Besides violating the neutrality policy, she allegedly attended meetings and presentations without agency approval and disclosed details of the school board’s deliberations to non-board members.

“What makes this case unique is that there is a pattern of misconduct,” Ho said.

Comer’s lawyers say no other agency employee has been warned, reprimanded or fired for failing to remain neutral on an issue before the board. Mishkin said the neutrality policy requires teachers to “pull your punch” if students ask about the relationship between creationism and evolution.

“They said, ‘You must do your job with one hand tied behind your back,'” he said.

Creationism is the belief that the Earth and its creatures were created by a deity. It’s an alternative to the origin of life explanation taught in public schools under the theory of evolution, which puts forth that all living organisms descended from a common ancestral gene pool.

About The Great One

Am interested in science and philosophy as well as sports; cycling and tennis. Enjoy reading, writing, playing chess, collecting Spyderco knives and fountain pens.
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