Thursday, September 24, 2009

Darwin reframed (and defamed?)

Mary Elizabeth Williams, Kirk Cameron monkeys with Darwin: The sitcom star and super-Christian is giving away a new version of "On the Origin of Species," and it's got Nazis

Celebrations and exhibitions commemorating [the publication of “On the Origin of Species”] are gearing up across the world, but Cameron and his God squad are not going to sit around quietly while monkey ancestry gets peddled to America’s youth. On Nov. 21, they’re handing "the truth" straight to them -- in the form of 50,000 free copies of Darwin’s book, amended with a 50-page introduction refuting the whole megillah, at the top 50 college campuses across the country.. . . .

It’s easy to laugh at the absurdity of the project. It’s already being widely mined for its rich comic value, notably by a hot blond Romanian woman, who suggests maybe we get Richard Dawkins to do a new introduction to the Bible . . . .

But what's not funny is what happens when “the opposing -- and correct -- view” gets into the hands of "our future doctors and lawyers and politicians." That's when they realize they're holding a sneaky defilement of one of the most important books ever written. Nowhere on the front of the “beautiful, full color cover edition” are the words “extremist Christian version.” Because maybe if those targeted 50,000 students knew they were getting their free book from a ministry that advises its practitioners on how to “shut up” a Jew or explain to a homosexual that he’s damned, they might not be so keen on it. They might feel duped and angry at accepting something from a group that proclaims free speech but doesn’t have the courage to put its true intentions right there on the cover.

So, in a moral rights jurisdiction, would Darwin's heirs be able to suppress this edition?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wonder if this will spawn future "introductions" to On the Origin of Species--by someone like Dawkins--that discredit this religious group's view. If those introductions use parts (or all) of religious group's introduction . . . hello lawsuit. Then we are right back in the territory of using copyright law to silence viewpoints--which is what a moral rights claim would do, as well.

MotherWeary said...

It might be wise for someone to go through these freebies to make sure that the Righteous haven't monkeyed with the text of Darwin's book. I wouldn't put it beyond them.