
PETERSBURG, Ky. -- Amid protesters and television cameras, several thousand visitors lined up yesterday for the opening of the Creation Museum, a $27 million attraction purporting that the Bible's creation story is literal fact supported by science.
Visitors watched high-tech animatronic dinosaurs wag their tails next to playing children in a diorama. They examined fossils and skulls, walked through a lush Garden of Eden and watched robotic men hammer on Noah's Ark in advance of God's retribution.
Through a mix of exhibits and displays, they were told that the Grand Canyon was created in the biblical flood; that Noah's animals repopulated continents by floating across oceans on uprooted trees; that the earth is 6,000 years old, not billions; and that poison dart frogs were harmless before Adam's sin.
Some visitors said the 60,000-square-foot museum -- a cross between a natural history museum and a biblical theme park -- reinforced their views that evolution and the Big Bang -- the theory that the universe was created in a giant explosion -- are wrong, despite scientific consensus to the contrary.
"If you want to believe you came from animals, that's you," said Paul Aduba, who came from Toledo, Ohio. "But it's a lie."
Outside the gates of the museum, more than 100 protesters, including scientists and humanist groups, held signs that read "Science Not Superstition" and "Don't Brainwash Our Children."
One group rented a plane that buzzed the parking lot trailing a sign that read in part, "Thou Shalt Not Lie."
"This is a museum of misinformation," said
Lawrence M. Krauss, an outspoken critic who heads the Center for Education and Research in Cosmology and Astrophysics at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
"It's fine for people to believe whatever they want -- whether it's wrong or not," he said. "But what's inappropriate is to essentially lie and say science supports these notions. It doesn't."
Gene Kritsky, a biology professor at the College of Mount St. Joseph in Cincinnati, said the "quote-unquote museum," which has drawn international media attention, was "an embarrassment" for the region.
The museum, which includes a digital planetarium, is the work of Answers in Genesis, a conservative religious group that is part of the "young Earth" creationist movement.
Unlike "intelligent design," an idea that suggests that the universe was created by a "designer" but doesn't specify who that is and still accepts that it is billions of years old, young Earth creationists believe the Bible's book of Genesis is exactly how the world was formed -- that is, in six 24-hour days.
Because they believe the world is just 6,000 years old, they say that dinosaurs must have co-existed with humans. They believe the story of the flood and the ark are literally true.
"We use the same science … we just interpret it differently," said creator Ken Ham, who started the ministry in his native Australia and has raised money for years to build the museum.
Ham said he sees the museum as a new weapon in a wider "culture war" for Christians who "feel like they've been beat down" in battles over abortion, gay marriage and the display of the Ten Commandments in public places. He also hopes it will change the views of non-believing visitors.
Polls show that many Americans agree with some of Ham's views. A 2006 CBS poll found that 51 percent of Americans think God created humans in their present form. More believe that while humans evolved, God guided the process. Just 15 percent said that humans evolved and God was not involved.
There are a handful of creationist museums nationwide. But critics and supporters alike say Kentucky's museum brings the idea to a new level because of its scope and high-tech design.
One of its top designers also helped created the Jaws attraction at Universal Studios in Florida. Organizers expect 250,000 people a year.
Inside, a 200-seat special-effects theater simulates wind and rain and features two angelic characters who declare, "God loves science!" At a great flood exhibit, animatronic men work on a wooden reproduction of Noah's ark, which the museum contends also held dinosaurs and could carry 125,280 "sheep-sized animals."
Fossils, the museum contends, were formed in the aftermath of God's retribution in the flood thanks in part to "unique chemical conditions."
"There's two different theories," Sean Riccardelli of Pennsylvania told his daughters, Elina, 7, and Liza, 9, as they read biblical passages from one exhibit. "You believe what's in your heart … what your faith tells you."
Exhibits question evidence of evolution, such as Lucy, the Ethiopian hominid whose remains are thought to be a link between apes and humans. "It makes sense," one exhibit says, that some organisms' systems were designed to work together.
At the cafeteria overlooking the facility's 49 acres of parkland, patrons munched on "Before the Fall" salads and the daily special -- BBQ Pterodactyl wings (pork shank). The bookstore included titles such as "Lucy: She's No Lady!" and "Refuting Evolution" along with children's coloring books and plastic dinosaurs.
Judy Vinson, who drove seven hours from Alabama to see the opening, said she didn't find anything she disagreed with.
"Evolution doesn't make sense," she said, nor does the Big Bang, thought by scientists to have created the universe. "Explosions don't construct" things, she said.
LINKhttp://www.creationmuseum.org/
This is not so much a museum as it is a church with special effects. One has to wonder why "51%" who believe "God" created them is feeling "beaten down" by "15%" who believe in evolution. Could it be the 'weapons of our warfare' are more "mighty?" If "God" be for the "child of God," why do they need a museum like mere humans in order to score points? If "God be for [them], who can be against [them]?" Apparently, since God remains silent in their defense, Christians are now forced to use an animated Noah to 'prove' Gods existance.
How are people, this abysmally stupid, going to contribute anything, but more stupid babies to our society?
Fat, ignorant, trailer trash, who are so dumb that they can go through this thing with their children and not even have a clue that they are committing "Child abuse"
Dan
xrayman
*I guess it were in them big lizards stomachs.Yup,we here in texas are just as learned as them in kentucky,....Yuk yuk.-freedy
Why spend millions on this and not on feeding the hungry, or making good whiskey?
-freedy-
Yeah, and if you want to believe you were made from DIRT, that's you also.
But that's a faerie-tale.
Tell me again why we're not supposed to call these magic-believers "Stupid"?
Oh, America, you were once so great, you once had SO much promise for the future. Then we let Neo-Cons and Corporatists line their pockets with the National Treasury and wealthy flim-flam men with their boogie-man in the Sky to scare the Sheeple into compliance...
John of Indiana
Creation Museum
PO Box 510
Hebron, KY 41048
"I really think this is a positive thing. It really broadcasts just how ignorant, backward and serious these fundys are. The more popular this theme park becomes the more attention it will draw to them exposing them and no doubt causing some of those believers to wake up and leave the fold. In short they are putting the noose around their own neck and tightening it."
You may be right. I am 44 years old and until last year when I read myself out of God belief, I hadn't a clue there were knuckleheads out there who believed the earth to be 6,000 years old. My public shcool education never mentioned such nonsense. I considered myself to be fairly well read and up on most aspects of our culture, but I have never heard of a theory that man and dinasaur coexisted until I was enlighted to guys like Kent and Ken.
So maybe just maybe a few more reasonable folks will be as shocked by this shit as I was and start speaking out.
xrayman
Preferably next door to the Creationist one...
I think it should have been an addition to Kings Island as The Ham amusement park for illiterates. I am disgusted.
Someone here had a great point-- why didn't this moron donate the millions it took to build this pile of shit to poor suffering children who really need help.
I was raised Seventh Day Adventist, a very restrictive religion, and dismissed christianity and all forms of fairy tales as bullshit many years ago. Some of my brothers and sisters still believe the earth is 6,000 years old. One sister believes the earth is older, because a day in biblical terms is really 1,000 years so it took god longer than 6 days to create the universe. SHEESH. All I could say to her with that revelation was--Judy, go crack open an elementary school science book or two for fuck sake! :)
I can't help but be sarcastic over this shit. I am so happy this website exists, and I have at least 1 family member, and a good friend who are atheist, otherwise I would lose it having to deal with the other nutjobs in my life!!!
SO what about the other 100,000,000 species?
International media attention means it's an embarassement for the entire nation. *blush*