Discovery Institute | Page 791 | Public policy think tank advancing a culture of purpose, creativity, and innovation.

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Row of High School Lockers
Image Credit: Helistockter - Adobe Stock

Darwin evolves in Melvindale

The school board in Melvindale had what it thought was a reasonable idea: Let students know there are increasing scientific arguments against the Darwinian dogma of evolution by chance and natural selection (“materialism”). But then they ran up against “the script.” The script is Inherit the Wind, a popular film from 1960 that presented a fictional version of the famous Read More ›

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Empty classroom with vintage tone wooden chairs. Back to school concept.
Image Credit: EduLife Photos - Adobe Stock

‘Intelligent Design’ vs. ‘Materialism’

In Melvindale, Michigan, a blue collar suburb of Detroit, the school board held a tumultuous public hearing this week that seems to have caught everyone by surprise. The Board chairman, John Rowe, a former science teacher who now directs nuclear medicine and radiology at an area hospital, started with what he thought was a reasonable idea: Let students know that Read More ›

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Election campaign
Image Credit: Microgen - Adobe Stock

Congratulation to those who won, and lost, on Election Day

The victors are toasted and courted, their victory parties packed. People who didn’t answer their calls during the campaign are clamoring now to get onto their schedules. But, as usual, many backers of the losers found it inconvenient to show up at election-night wakes. Defeated candidates typically are allowed a graceful departure speech, but then are expected to disappear. Hardly Read More ›

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Frayed rope about to break
Licensed from Adobe Stock

The Unraveling of Scientific Materialism

In a retrospective essay on Carl Sagan in the January 9, 1997 New York Review of Books, Harvard Genetics Professor Richard Lewontin tells how he first met Sagan at a public debate in Arkansas in 1964. The two young scientists had been coaxed by senior colleagues to go to Little Rock to debate the affirmative side of the question: “RESOLVED, that Read More ›

Taking the high road on transportation issues

The current paralysis on state Route 520 creates instant flashbacks for those familiar with history: the collapse of the original Tacoma Narrows bridge, "Galloping Gertie," in 1940; the West Seattle drawbridge locked in "up" position for almost two years after being hit by a freighter in 1978; the sinkings of the Hood Canal Bridge in 1979 and the I-90 bridge in 1990. The greatest ongoing risk to 520 is structural collapse of the Evergreen Point floating bridge, the longest structure of its kind in the world. Experts say it can withstand only one more 20-year storm. This equates to a 40 percent chance of the bridge failing within a decade....As key highway links age or hit maximum capacity, the challenge of creative replacement becomes inescapable...Every panelist noted Seattle's current wealth. Yet (Seattle Mayor Paul) Schell and others mused over how this translates into public investment. The mayor said "the biggest challenge is how to fit 19th century governments into 21st century problems -- at a time when people don't want to pay for improvements. There is no constituency for change, yet change is inevitable." Read More ›
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Newspapers, world news information concept, close-up, panoramic
Image Credit: Aleksey 159 - Adobe Stock

Scandal-free campaign a frightening Halloween trick on news media

The truth is that the Seattle municipal elections now ending are most notable for their relative lack of rancor and underhanded tactics. Attempts at creating scandals have been half-hearted and fizzled fast. The ad-hominem attacks have been rare and pitifully unimaginative, the exposure of political correctness gaffes almost nonexistent. And we call ourselves a world-class city! For people in the Read More ›

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Aerial view of Seattle, USA
Image Credit: Sergii Figurnyi - Adobe Stock

Chong’s populism offers mere posture instead of a program

You finally find yourself wanting to help out Charlie Chong; not vote for him, necessarily, just help him make the mayor’s race more interesting by tying together the obviously disconnected strings of his campaign. The avowedly “populous” cause almost always wins elections in Seattle and nothing sells better than those old salted chestnuts, “neighborhood values.” So Chong’s single theme of Read More ›

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Cinematic Seattle Skyline Drone Pan: Columbia Center, Smith Tower, First Hill, Yesler Terrace
Image Credit: prapatsorn - Adobe Stock

Joel Pritchard: A politician whose character counted

The apartment on Seattle’s First Hill was nice, though modest, like its occupant. But it also had an inspiring view out over the city Joel Pritchard treasured. He said recently, “Almost every place with the most meaning in my life is within sight,” and that surely included Queen Anne Hill and Bainbridge Island, lands laden with childhood reveries. These were Read More ›

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wooden doll family happy face, family home, adoption foster care, homeless support , family mental health, domestic violence, social distancing
Image Credit: Looker_Studio - Adobe Stock

‘Kinship care’ the latest way to game the social welfare system–and it is the children who will pay the price

Here’s a riddle: How can a child’s mother become his sister, and his grandmother his mom? Answer: By government edict in America’s newest welfare trend, “kinship care.” Thanks to a biased social service system, welfare recipients anxious for more benefits, and gullible elected officials, the nation’s burgeoning foster care system is being used to discourage adoption of at-risk children and Read More ›

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Chinook Salmon Underwater
Image Credit: Conrad - Adobe Stock

How Many Are Enough?

Last year, the federal government listed Puget Sound chinook salmon under the Endangered Species Act. In the regional debate over how much to do and how many millions to spend, one question tends to be lost: How many Puget Sound chinook salmon will be enough? Read More ›