Tuesday, April 3, 2018

A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Section 1: Evolutionists were interviewed under false pretenses)

At one point in the movie (49:27 – 49:36), Richard Dawkins says, “by the way, I’m being a hell of a lot more frank and honest in this interview than many people in this field would be.” A statement like this might make one wonder how a movie with the intent of discrediting evolution got an evolutionist to be so candid. One might wonder what superpower they had to make him open up to the opposing side like that, and on film for that matter? In fact, there were no superpowers involved, just simple deception. The evolutionists in the movie were told that they were being interviewed for a much more even and balanced piece.

At least four different evolutionists who were interviewed for this movie have expressed their displeasure at being duped by the production staff. They claim that the producers invited them to be interviewed for a movie called “Crossroads: The Intersection of Science and Religion,” never mentioning that the purpose of the movie was to claim the scientific community was closed to any opposing ideas. In an interview about the movie with World Magazine, Ben Stein casually dismissed these criticisms:
WORLD: Some of the evolution experts you interviewed in Expelled are now telling the press that they were misrepresented. How do you respond to that?
STEIN: I don't think we took anything out of context. I know a number of the people we interviewed are complaining that we spoke to them without their knowing what the movie was about, but that really is not accurate. We told everyone involved that it was about the intersection of evolution and religion, and I think those who are now saying they didn't know that are sort of whistling Dixie. I think they're just unhappy that the movie came out as persuasive and powerful as it did.[4]

I guess Ben Stein doesn’t need to be in front of a camera to misrepresent evolutionists. As I mentioned, “the intersection of evolution and religion” is basically the same as the subtitle of their false-flag name for the movie (except he conflates “evolution” with “science;” isn’t that interesting?), so it seems ludicrous to claim that these people were complaining that they didn’t even know that much. I’ve read four different accounts of interviewees discussing their sense of betrayal, and what Stein claims they were “saying they didn’t know” is not even remotely accurate. They all knew it was going to be about the intersection of science and religion, because that’s exactly what the producers told them; what they did not know (because the producers seemed to be willfully hiding the fact) was that it was their intention all along to frame evolution as a dogma that’s enforced by silencing any professional or academic dissent.

For the producers to be willfully hiding their intentions, two things would have to be true:
1) How the movie’s intentions were described to the interviewees was different from how the movie ended up.
2) How the movie ended up was already their intention when the interviews were conducted.
If both of those statements are accurate, then I believe it presents a very strong case that the makers of Expelled willfully deceived the evolutionists participating in the interviews.

One of the interviewees, PZ Myers, sheds a lot of light on that first statement. In a post on his blog (after the news came out about what the movie really was), he posted a transcription of the letter he received from producer Mark Mathis:
Hello Mr. Myers,
My name is Mark Mathis. I am a Producer for Rampant Films. We are currently in production of the documentary film, “Crossroads: The Intersection of Science and Religion.”
At your convenience I would like to discuss our project with you and to see if we might be able to schedule an interview with you for the film. The interview would take no more than 90 minutes total, including set up and break down of our equipment.
We are interested in asking you a number of questions about the disconnect/controversy that exists in America between Evolution, Creationism and the Intelligent Design movement.
Please let me know what time would be convenient for me to reach you at your office. Also, could you please let me know if you charge a fee for interviews and if so, what that fee would be for 90 minutes of your time. I look forward to speaking with you soon.
Sincerely,
Mark Mathis
Rampant Films
[5]

Myers also said that he went to Rampant Films’ website, and he posted an image of the blurb which the website displayed for this mythical “Crossroads” movie:

Crossroads – The Intersection of Science and Religion
It’s been the central question of humanity throughout the ages: How in the world did we get here? In 1859, Charles Darwin provided the answer in his landmark book, “The Origin of Species.” In the century and a half since, biologists, geologists, physicists, astronomers, and philosophers have contributed a vast amount of research and data in support of Darwin’s idea. And yet, millions of Christians, Muslims, Jews and other people of faith believe in a literal interpretation that humans were crafted by the hand of God. This conflict between science and religion has unleashed passions in school board meetings, courtrooms and town halls across America and beyond.
This description of the mythical movie-that-never-was gives a very strong indication that the people who wrote the blurb accepted evolution as real science (or were trying to make someone think they did). It says Darwin “provided the answer” to the question, “how in the world did we get here?” and even talks about the “vast amount of research” that scientists in a variety of fields have contributed to the theory. That certainly doesn’t seem like a movie trying to accuse the evolutionist community of dogmatically accepting a theory with no real factual support.

Interviewee Michael Shermer doesn’t delve as much as Myers into how he got invited to participate, but he does say, “Ben Stein came to my office to interview me about what I was told was a film about "the intersection of science and religion" called Crossroads (yet another deception).”[6]  More on this quote later.

Interviewee Eugenie Scott (director of the National Center for Science Education), had this to say in a podcast interview:
Steve: What was your experience as an interviewee?
Scott: Well, I was just totally bamboozled. I got a call from Mark Mathis in April, a very—well, actually technically speaking [it] was an e-mail—but I got a contact which was very much in the ordinary. I get lots of calls from documentary makers who want to do something about creation and evolution and make a film.
Steve: This was April 2007?
Scott: Correct. And most of them don't pan out, but I'm always very helpful because it is to my advantage for people to get their story right. So, Mark called and he had kind of a vague idea about this movie that he was going to make called Crossroads. He identified himself as being from a film company called Rampant Films and Crossroads was sort of a generic science and religion, evolution and creationism looking at the controversy in American society. And fine, all those are there in the dozens.[7] 

In Richard Dawkins’ blog post about the movie, he spends most of his time telling a story about how PZ Myers was forcibly removed from a screening of Expelled (way to stand up from freedom of expression there), on the grounds that he didn’t have a ticket (even though it was a free screening), while Dawkins himself walked in unrecognized. After the screening was complete, Mathis took questions from the audience. This is the only point when Dawkins makes any reference to how he got involved with the project, saying this:
And Kristine asked Mathis to explain what had become of a film called Crossroads which had mysteriously morphed itself into Expelled. The import of her question was the widely known fact, which I have already mentioned, that PZ and I had been tricked into participating in Crossroads without ever being told that the true purpose of the film was the one conveyed by the later title Expelled -- the alleged expulsion of creationists from universities. Mathis said that it was common practice for films under production to have working titles, which later change in the final version.[8] 

Further evidence that the producers didn’t explain their true motivations to the interviewees is the fact that Dawkins does not conduct interviews with creationists:
Some time in the 1980s when I was on a visit to the United States, a television station wanted to stage a debate between me and a prominent creationist called, I think, Duane P Gish. I telephoned Stephen Gould for advice. He was friendly and decisive: "Don't do it." The point is not, he said, whether or not you would 'win' the debate. Winning is not what the creationists realistically aspire to. For them, it is sufficient that the debate happens at all. They need the publicity. We don't. To the gullible public which is their natural constituency, it is enough that their man is seen sharing a platform with a real scientist. "There must be something in creationism, or Dr So-and-So would not have agreed to debate it on equal terms." Inevitably, when you turn down the invitation you will be accused of cowardice, or of inability to defend your own beliefs. But that is better than supplying the creationists with what they crave: the oxygen of respectability in the world of real science.
I have followed his advice ever since…[9]

That’s the word of four different interviewees from their own accounts of the proceedings. Add to that the following excerpt from a New York Times article on the same subject:
A few months ago, the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins received an e-mail message from a producer at Rampant Films inviting him to be interviewed for a documentary called “Crossroads.”
The film, with Ben Stein, the actor, economist and freelance columnist, as its host, is described on Rampant’s Web site as an examination of the intersection of science and religion. Dr. Dawkins was an obvious choice. An eminent scientist who teaches at Oxford University in England, he is also an outspoken atheist who has repeatedly likened religious faith to a mental defect.
But now, Dr. Dawkins and other scientists who agreed to be interviewed say they are surprised — and in some cases, angered — to find themselves not in “Crossroads” but in a film with a new name and one that makes the case for intelligent design, an ideological cousin of creationism. The film, “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed,” also has a different producer, Premise Media.
[…]
If he had known the film’s premise, Dr. Dawkins said in an e-mail message, he would never have appeared in it. “At no time was I given the slightest clue that these people were a creationist front,” he said.
Eugenie C. Scott, a physical anthropologist who heads the National Center for Science Education, said she agreed to be filmed after receiving what she described as a deceptive invitation.
“I have certainly been taped by people and appeared in productions where people’s views are different than mine, and that’s fine,” Dr. Scott said, adding that she would have appeared in the film anyway. “I just expect people to be honest with me, and they weren’t.”[10]

With all those accounts put together, I think there’s a very strong case that the first statement to indicate deception is correct, that the interviewees were sold on a different concept of the movie than what was ultimately released. But, as I said, it’s only indicative of willful deception if the producers went into those interviews already having the intention to make the type of movie that they eventually presented.

As evidence for that claim, blogger Wesley Elsberry discovered that “the producers registered the URL "expelledthemovie.com" on March 1, 2007—more than a month (and in some cases, several months) before the scientists were interviewed.[11] The producers never registered the URL “crossroadsthemovie.com.” In case you find that too circumstantial, all the necessary proof that the movie was always meant as an attack on evolution, rather than a balanced examination, can be found by going back to that World Magazine interview with Ben Stein, and looking at the very first question:
WORLD: How did you get involved with Expelled?
STEIN: I was approached a couple of years ago by the producers, and they described to me the central issue of Expelled, which was about Darwinism and why it has such a lock on the academic establishment when the theory has so many holes. And why freedom of speech has been lost at so many colleges to the point where you can't question even the slightest bit of Darwinism or your colleagues will spurn you, you'll lose your job, and you'll be publicly humiliated. As they sent me books and talked to me about these things I became more enthusiastic about participating.[4]

By Stein’s own testimony, the project had never been presented to him as a simple look at the intersection between science and religion. Whether it had ever been called Crossroads or not, it was always presented to him as being precisely about the message that was presented in the finished film. That indicates that the “Expelled” concept was already determined before Stein came on board. If, therefore, Stein himself were involved with the interviews (as he was with both Shermer and Dawkins), then those interviews must have been conducted after the anti-evolution focus of the movie had been decided.

Shermer’s account makes it clear that the purpose of the interview with him was confrontational from the beginning. Here’s the further context of the single sentence I quoted before:
Ben Stein came to my office to interview me about what I was told was a film about “the intersection of science and religion” called Crossroads (yet another deception). I knew something was afoot when his first question to me was on whether or not I think someone should be fired for expressing dissenting views. I pressed Stein for specifics: Who is being fired for what, when and where? In my experience, people are usually fired for reasons having to do with budgetary constraints, incompetence or not fulfilling the terms of a contract. Stein finally asked my opinion on people being fired for endorsing intelligent design. I replied that I know of no instance where such a firing has happened.[6]

Dawkins, in his account, implies an even more insidious plot to deceive, claiming that Mathis let Dawkins think that he was also an evolutionist. He said:
Could Mathis have been sincere when he originally told PZ and me the film was an honest attempt to examine evolution and intelligent design? The evidence that they had already purchased the Expelled domain name argues against this. Certainly Mathis' friendly demeanour disarmed me into cooperating with him -- indeed, I went out of my way to HELP him on his visit to Britain -- in a way that I never would have if I had had the slightest suspicion that his outfit was in fact a creationist front. I may have misremembered the details of our exchanges, by eMail and by telephone, but I vividly remember his reassuring me, over the telephone, that he was on the side of science, and he made no attempt to distance himself from my sarcastic jokes about 'Intelligent Design'. I am reluctantly driven to wonder whether he is an inveterate liar, as well as a dreadful film-maker. Yet another example of Lying for Jesus?[8]

You could say that Shermer and Dawkins might have a reason to fabricate a false story about their experiences, but their accounts are corroborated by Stein’s admission that the “expelled” version of the movie was the one that was presented to him, from the very beginning. The people making the movie did already intend for it to be an exposé of evolutionary bias in the scientific community before at least those interviews involving Stein had been conducted. In addition, the previously-cited New York Times article went on to say, of producer Walt Ruloff:
Mr. Ruloff, a Canadian who lives in British Columbia, said he turned to filmmaking after selling his software company in the 1990s. He said he decided to make “Expelled,” his first project, after he became interested in genomics and biotechnology but discovered “there are certain questions you are just not allowed to ask and certain approaches you are just not allowed to take.”[10]

That certainly sounds like what was in the final movie was what he intended all along, doesn’t it?  With that preponderance of evidence to support both the first and second statements (that the interviewees were given a different idea of the movie’s intent, and that the intent seen in the final movie was already their plan at the time the interviews were conducted), there is then a strong case in support of the claim that the producers (and probably Ben Stein as well) acted with willful intent to deceive the scientists involved in those interviews. If they deceived them, I can’t help but wonder if they didn’t mind deceiving the audience as well…



Monday, April 2, 2018

A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Section 5: Numerous Minor Charges)



A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4G: The moral implication of invoking the Holocaust)




A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4F: "Necessary, but not sufficient")







A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4E: Other influences for Hitler)






A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4D: The Quote from Darwin)






A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4C: Did Darwin lead to Hitler?)







A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4B: From Darwin to Hitler criticisms)







A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Sec. 4A: Examing the rhetorical value of invoking Hitler)






A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Section 3: Clear double standards)







A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Section 2: Were they really expelled?)






A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Summary of Contents)


Before getting into the meat of presenting the evidence against the movie, I spend a little time discussing what type of evidence I collected (a lot of web links), and my thoughts on the natural human tendency to just toss out any sources which go against what we already believe.
In this section, I provide strong evidence that the evolutionists[1] who were interviewed in the movie were intentionally deceived about what the nature of the movie would be. If the people making the movie deliberately deceived these interviewees, who else might they have deliberately deceived (i.e., the audience)?
In this section, I fact-check the claims made by the people the movie says were “expelled” (persecuted or punished for advocating intelligent design) and show that most of their major claims of persecution are directly contradicted by verifiable facts of what really happened (and the ones that aren’t provably false are either highly questionable, or just non-stories).
In this section, I expand on and show evidence for two major ways that the movie betrays a clear double standard and shows bias for their side (just like the movie claims the evolutionists do). It ignores and denies the existence of those many Christians who believe in evolution and yet remain religious, and it fails to includes similar “expelled” stories of people who suffered persecution for teaching evolution instead of Biblical creationism.
Section 4: Connecting Darwin to Hitler
Though it only takes up about ten minutes of the film, the allegation of a direct causal relationship between Darwin’s theory of evolution and Hitler committing the Holocaust is such a grandiose and serious claim that I had to devote a disproportionate amount of space to unpacking all the problems with this argument. To that end, I separated this section into multiple subsections…
I begin by giving an overview of the ways that invoking Hitler to make your point is generally considered a very cheap and even fallacious rhetorical tactic, regardless of how accurate the connection to Hitler may be (but don’t worry, I cover the inaccuracy of the Hitler connection further on).
Since the primary source for this section of the movie is the book From Darwin to Hitler by Richard Weikart, I provide some excerpts from scholarly reviews of the book, to show that it’s not exactly revered as a paragon of excellence within the academic community, lest you think that Weikart’s word on the issue should be accepted simply because he’s a historian and I’m not.
 I address the argument of this part of the movie more directly, showing quotes from Hitler himself and other sources to demonstrate that it doesn’t make logical or historical sense to claim that Darwin influenced Hitler to commit the Holocaust.
I provide a fuller (and less deceptive) context for the quote from Darwin’s book that Ben Stein recited in the part of the movie trying to connect Darwin to Hitler.
I present alternate sources which claim that Hitler was far more influenced by religious influences than by Darwin, and present a large collection of quotes from Mein Kampf which indicate a religious viewpoint.
I shine a light on the deceptive way that people in this movie cover their butts by quietly acknowledging how belief in Darwinian evolution couldn’t really have been the reason for the Holocaust all by itself, even as they turn around and try to act like it was.
I examine the moral bankruptcy of trying to convince people that a scientific theory is wrong by leveraging the deaths of millions to turn people against the perceived consequences of a theory, instead of the scientific accuracy of it.
In this section, I go through all the rest of the movie not covered in the major sections, and makes notes about smaller individual points; some are based on evidence, some are more personal subjective commentaries. But with the overall trend of bad information that’s been established by the previous four sections, I think it’s fair to look with a little closer scrutiny at less dramatically deceptive elements of the movie. I believe the pattern of false information and manipulation which has thus far been established is consistently upheld throughout the movie.



[1] Having been a creationist for the first 26 years of my life, I never gave a second thought to the term “evolutionist.”  However, since first writing this, it’s come to my attention that the term is considered pejorative by many people on the evolution side, because creationists often use it in connection with the idea that people on the evolution side are just following “the religion of evolutionism” (which is absolutely not a real thing, by the way).  I don’t think it necessarily needs to be taken that way; yes, terns like “theist” and “atheist” do indicate religious beliefs (or lack thereof), but terms like “biologist” and “archaeologist” do not.  So, there really shouldn’t be anything about the “-ist” suffix which denotes religion.  Furthermore, Richard Dawkins has even ascribed the label to himself on at least one occasion, so I don’t think there’s any reason to think it must always be taken pejoratively.
In any case, I’m not gonna go back and change it now, because I think a whole phrase like “people on the evolution side” might get to be too cumbersome, and because this footnote is formally serving as my notice that I don’t mean it in the pejorative sense that some people take it.

A Critical Analysis of "Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed" (Introduction)


This project was begun for the purpose of exploring and investigating the possibility of deception or misinformation in the movie Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed. Having now concluded that investigation, I believe there is a very strong case for rampant misinformation, and at least some clear cases of willful deception. Some of these instances have been documented by others already, but I have expanded on them, and have tried to find more and better sources of evidence than some other reviews have made. My original intention was by no means for this project to be of such a large scale; it’s only because of the enormity and severity of the deceit, misinformation, and manipulation evident in the movie that this grew to such an immense size (over 40,000 words, not even counting the footnotes).

I’d like to clarify what I mean when I say deceit, and how an intent to deceive can be knowable. If an informational movie like this communicates information which turns out to not be true, then that doesn’t necessarily mean that they had a specific willful intent to deliberately deceive the audience. It may simply be that they themselves were misinformed. The only way to know that somebody was being deliberately deceptive is to find out whether they knew that the way they were representing the information was false at the time they represented it. In some cases, all I can do is find evidence of misinformation, without any way to know whether the people making the movie were aware of its falsity or not (but if they weren’t, it speaks very ill indeed of their research quality, which should be essential to an informative piece like this). In other instances, however, a strong case can be made that they knew exactly how false the information was as they were conveying it.

I suppose it might also be necessary to briefly discuss the nature of evidence. I’ve tried as much as possible to provide overwhelming evidence for my position, so that nobody can claim that I’m simply making dogmatic, a priori assumptions that the movie is false. I have over two hundred footnotes (some of which have more than one link, providing multiple points of independent verification), and the sources are pretty much all on the internet, so you don’t have to hunt down some book to double-check my evidence.

So that speaks to the quantity of evidence; now let’s talk about the slightly more iffy subject of quality. In the early days of the internet, a research paper (for that is what this ultimately amounts to) with nothing but internet links would be considered an absolute garbage dump of shoddy, lazy research. Fortunately, these days, pretty much every major newspaper (and most minor ones) have a significant online presence, as do many scientific journals (though you often have to pay for those) and other reputable sources. So screw the proper MLA style for how to cite a newspaper article; now we can just paste in a URL, and it takes you right to where you need to go (as long as the link stays alive). But even among such reputable sources as major newspapers, there is still the capacity for human bias. There’s not really much I can do to present evidence so indisputable that an incredulous reader won’t be able to throw some of it out as being purely the product of bias. It is a common and understandable human reaction to subconsciously dismiss evidence from the other side of an argument purely because of its implications, and not because of any qualitative failing.[2]

However, I want to make the point that I didn’t throw out the “evidence” of this movie’s claims purely because it was on the other side of the argument from me and I didn’t like the implications. The only reason I’m now able to so confidently dismiss the claims of this movie is because I have built up such a large amount of evidence against it. So, if you have a suspicion that something printed in a New York Times article was not wholly accurate, then I encourage you to look for evidence to support that suspicion. But I must say, if somebody casually dismissed a piece of evidence printed in a liberal newspaper (or whatever other sources they think might have reasons for bias) only because those facts would point to someone on their side being a liar, then I don’t think they’re approaching this issue very rationally.[3]

Even so, I have made an effort to provide independent/redundant sources wherever possible. It’s harder to discredit the claims made by two independent sources, unless you really believe in a vast, global, multigenerational conspiracy to foist evolution on the unsuspecting public. To that I would say, if such a conspiracy were real, why did they ever let this movie get released? Furthermore, there are some instances where I was able to support my case with sources that would have no motive to fabricate this information. A good example is the fact-check of Caroline Crocker, where I was able to refute the movie’s claims using only a news article that seemed very sympathetic to her side of the issue, and an article from the Discovery Institute itself. In the case of Richard Sternberg, I found a page from his own website which directly contradicted the claims he made in the movie.

Ultimately, there’s a danger of what I might call an “infinite regress of incredulity.”  If one were determined to believe that everything in this movie were the Gospel Truth, one could suggest that the statement on Sternberg’s website were an elaborate hoax, or that the Discovery Institute was somehow tricked into posting an article that would later help falsify a movie that hadn’t even come out yet (or maybe the movie had already come out, and somebody hacked the DI website and posted the article with a false date). All these things may be technically possible, but I’m not gonna lose any sleep worrying about that. Like I said, I have over two hundred links. If you want to toss out a few of them, fine, go ahead. I’ll still have plenty more, which show a distinct pattern that this movie consistently presents false and misleading information.

But if you’re going to toss out every single piece of evidence I provide through such an extraordinary process of mental gymnastics, then I really think you should ask yourself why you’re not applying the same level of skepticism to this movie, as you are to my sources.





[3] I originally wrote this piece in 2015, before the rise of Donald Trump and his hypocritical siren call of “fake news.” It seems somewhat inadequate now that we’ve seen just how willing people are to summarily ignore or dismiss any sources which go against what they already believe, but I really don’t think it’s worth my time at this point to devote a whole additional section to making the rational case for not dismissing sources purely because they reach conclusions you don’t like. I would simply reiterate the point I made in the original paragraph; I didn’t ultimately reach this place of utter contempt for Expelled because I didn’t like the claims it was making. I got here by assembling an overwhelming body of evidence that the information being presented in the movie is false. I have challenged people who claim that the mainstream media is a hopeless morass of liberal bias to present their best evidence, and when they do, it’s extremely thin and subjective. So as it stands now, I see no evidence-based reason to exclude something like the New York Times as a credible source for this research project.