Education
with regard to science in the US has just deteriorated. It’s shameful. (Jacobsen,
2017)
James Randi
I am sentimentally attached to the Jewish tradition, which I was raised in. But I don’t take seriously the truth value of my own tradition or of other religious traditions. (Institute of Physics, 2013)
Edward Witten
We are far more
impressed by stories than by studies, we are so good at pattern recognition
that we see patterns that aren’t real (like the Virgin Mary on a toasted cheese
sandwich), we tend to jump to conclusions before we have all the evidence, and
we let emotions trump reason. Science and critical thinking don’t come
naturally to us; it requires a lot of education and effort to overcome our
brain’s default thought processes, and not everyone can do it.
(Jacobsen, 2016)
Harriet Hall
Science is the engine of prosperity. From steam power to electricity to the laser to the transistor to the computer… However, the information revolution has a weakness. The weakness is precisely the educational system. The United States has the worst educational system known to science. Our graduates compete regularly at the level of third world countries. So, how come the scientific establishment of the United States doesn’t collapse? If we are producing a generation of dummies, if the Stupid Index of America keeps rising every year… (Dr. Kaku’s Videos, 2016)
Michio Kaku
Probably 95% or
more of all biological scientists accept the board outlines of the theory of
evolution. In the National Academy, the percentage is probably even higher… I
do not have proof of God, and I am sceptical of those who claim otherwise. But
I find something remarkable in the very fact that we, as a species, have been
able to learn so much about the universe and the nature of existence. (Jacobsen, 2014a; Jacobsen, 2014b)
Kenneth
Miller
Like everyone participating I’m what’s called here a
“secular atheist,” except that I can’t even call myself an
“atheist” because it is not at all clear what I’m being asked to
deny. However, it should be obvious to everyone that by
and large science reaches deep explanatory theories to the extent
that it narrows its gaze.
…As for the various religions, there’s no doubt that
they are very meaningful to adherents, and allow them to delude themselves into
thinking there is some meaning to their lives beyond what we agree is the case.
I’d never try to talk them out of the delusions, which are necessary for
them to live a life that makes some sense to them. These beliefs can
provide a framework for deeds that are noble or savage, and anywhere in
between, and there’s every reason to focus attention on the deeds and the
background for them, to the extent that we can grasp it. (Chomsky, 2006)
Noam
Chomsky
Evolution and creationism pose
particular challenges.
The religious stuff, that’s layered on top of it there. I think there are understandably people who feel threatened by natural selection because they feel, rightly or wrongly, that it threatens some of their cherished religious beliefs.
I think that’s something that
those of us who are skeptics communicating with a public, I think we have to be
very sensitive to that and realize that we are potentially threatening people’s
worldviews. (Jacobsen,
2018b)
Scott O.
Lilienfeld
To me, the brain evolved in order to get you to do
certain things in certain ways: largely to reproduce. However, along the way,
your brain in eating and having sex releases certain chemicals that feel really
good. Evolution has modified your brain over time to make you feel good by
doing certain things.
What does that mean? That means that our brains get us
high. Lots of things that we do get us high.
Watching a good movie, voting for the right candidate
that we think will take this country to the next stage, watching the Raptors do
as they did, or Milos Raonic doing so at Wimbledon, or swinging on a swing, or
watching the birth of your child, these things get us high.
They are
incredible experiences. Religious belief is the granddaddy of all highs.
(Jacobsen, 2018a)
Christopher DiCarlo
The only way, therefore, that dialogue as a rational
experience can take place is that, on the part of religion, the dialogue be
limited to the rational foundations for religious belief. Even then, the only
way that any such dialogue could have universal significance is that we could
assume that there existed common rational foundations across all religious traditions
and that is simply not the case. It seems, therefore, that any fruitful
dialogue requires that the rational basis for certain specific religious
beliefs in certain specific religious traditions be confronted with what is
known from the natural sciences. The natural sciences, in particular, have made
great advances by adhering rigidly to canons of what is scientifically true. In
fact, in recent years the norms for judging the scientific truth of a given
theory of life’s origins and evolution have been extended, it appears to me, in
the direction of inviting dialogue with philosophy and theology. (Jacobsen, 2014d)
Fr. George V. Coyne, S.J.
Creationists, however, especially the intelligent
design creationists about whom I have written so much, deliberately conflate
philosophical and methodological naturalism. They argue that leaving God out of
scientific explanations is tantamount to personal atheism. So my concern as a
researcher has been to clarify the relationship between philosophical and
methodological naturalism. I argue that although philosophical naturalism rests
on what we have learned about the world through the naturalistic methodology of
science, methodological naturalism does not, conversely, require philosophical
naturalism as a personal worldview because it does not exclude the logical
possibility of the supernatural. I think that this is the most accurate and
intellectually honest position to take even though I myself am no longer
religious. (Jacobsen, 2013)
Barbara
Forrest
President George W. Bush favours teaching both
evolution and “Intelligent Design” in schools, “so people can know what the
debate is about.” To proponents, Intelligent Design is the notion that the
universe is too complex to have developed without a nudge from a higher power
than evolution or natural selection.
To detractors, Intelligent Design is creationism — the
literal interpretation of the Book of Genesis — in a thin guise, or simply
vacuous, about as interesting as “I don’t understand,” as has always been true
in the sciences before understanding is reached. Accordingly, there cannot be a
“debate.”
…So far, however, the curriculum has not encompassed
one obvious point of view: Malignant Design.
Unlike Intelligent Design, for which the evidence is
zero, malignant design has tons of empirical evidence, much more than Darwinian
evolution, by some criteria: the world’s cruelty. (Chomsky, 2005)
Noam Chomsky
I think that comes down to a fundamental question, “Is
there any objectivity to our moral ideals?” The answer to that is,
“No. Either you empathize with humanity or you do not. If you
empathize with humanity, you feel an imperative.” Now, that does not mean
you cannot use reason against your opponents. Most of them are, or would at
least claim, that they share this bond with humanity and would try and make a
case that what we are doing makes no difference.
That leads
directly from ethics to science. If what we are doing makes no difference, then
there is no moral choice, is there? However, if science shows there are important
choices that could be made, then you have to take a stand. Either you
possess humane ideals and think all human beings are worthy of moral concern.
Or you think this will not happen for 20 years. I am 80 now, so I do not
think I will live to see the consequences, and assume I have no grandchildren –
so to hell with everyone. Moral imperatives arise out of moral
commitments. If you have no commitment that gives you a bond with
humanity, I cannot open your mouth and thrust one down your throat. (Jacobsen,
2014c)
James Flynn
Of the notable natural science education moments in North American history is the Scopes Trial or the Scopes “Monkey” Trial, an important point to reflect on, especially as newer survey data indicates a consistently large minority of Canadians would fall within a standard categorization of Young Earth Creationist (The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2018; NCSE Staff, 2008; CROP, 2017). The Scopes Trial represented a moment of grotesque ignorance on display, enshrined in law and protected in its enforcement, and presented the intrusion of religion into law for the prevention of critical thinking and science education from entering into the educational system.
H.L. Mencken, deceased and famous American journalist, who brought this trial particular fame – and himself mind you, on June 29th stated:
It is common to assume that human progress affects everyone — that even the dullest man, in these bright days, knows more than any man of, say, the Eighteenth Century, and is far more civilized. This assumption is quite erroneous. The men of the educated minority, no doubt, know more than their predecessors, and of some of them, perhaps, it may be said that they are more civilized — though I should not like to be put to giving names — but the great masses of men, even in this inspired republic, are precisely where the mob was at the dawn of history. They are ignorant, they are dishonest, they are cowardly, they are ignoble. They know little if anything that is worth knowing, and there is not the slightest sign of a natural desire among them to increase their knowledge. (Mencken, 1925a)
Mencken would continue in much the same tone throughout the trial, even coining the title of the “Scopes ‘Monkey’ Trial” [Foster, n.d.]. The trial lasted from July 10 to July 21, 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee, in the United States. There was a charge on a specific school teacher for teaching evolution via natural selection, where this implied breaking state law (The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2018). Mencken joked, “…it is believed that settlers will be attracted to the town as to some refuge from the atheism of the great urban Sodoms and Gomorrahs” (Mencken, 1925b).
Bearing in mind, of course,
Darwin published On the Origin of Species
in 1859, and the trial happened several decades later. The continuance of
non-scientific or proto-modern scientific theories do not happen within a
vacuum. Indeed, Mencken commented, scathingly, on the context for Tennesseans
there:
Prayer can accomplish a lot. It can cure diabetes, find lost pocketbooks and restrain husbands from beating their wives. But is prayer made any more efficacious by giving a circus first? Coming to this thought, Dayton begins to sweat. (Mencken, 1925b, July 9)
Primitive beliefs, forms of life,
and ways of thinking fester without some aspects of the light of modernity. Forms
of magical thinking representative of a community, probably, in poverty-level
conditions. A bad life can lead to hopes for a better one in another
transcendent realm in an instant with enough pleading, begging, and
solicitation to the highest choir of divine. A few months prior to the official
trial in July, the legislature for the state of Tennessee determined unlawful
the teaching of anything but the literal idea of the creation of man and woman
as taught in the Bible in the Book of
Genesis (Ibid.).
In preparatory remarks, Mencken
sniped with derision stating, “Two months ago the town was obscure and happy.
Today it is a universal joke” (East Tennessee State University, n.d.). In
the height of the reportage, Mencken declared, “As for the advertising that
went out over the leased wires, I greatly fear that it has quite ruined the
town. When people recall it hereafter they will think of it as they think of
Herrin, Ill., and Homestead, Pa. It will be a joke town at best, and infamous
at worst” (Mencken, 1925k).
The Butler Act was introduced by John Washington Butler on January 21,
1925 and then became effective on March 13, 1925 and remained in force for 40
years, passing in the House by near unanimity with 71-6 while the “Tennessee
Senate approved it by nearly as overwhelming a margin, 24-6” (Scoville, 2018).[1]
Butler, himself, was a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives
(Ibid.). Mencken thought little of the citizens surrounding the trial, where he
reported:
Whatever lies above the level of their comprehension is of the devil. A
glass of wine delights civilized men; they themselves, drinking it, would get
drunk. Ergo, wine must be prohibited. The hypothesis of evolution is credited
by all men of education; they themselves can’t understand it. Ergo, its
teaching must be put down. (Mencken, 1925a)
Also
stating, “Dayton, of course, is only a ninth-rate country town, and so its
agonies are of relatively little interest to the world” (Mencken, 1925k). This
set the basis for a pivotal moment in the ongoing and still current, given the
demographics, sociopolitical controversies of the teaching of a philosophy of
discovery (and substantiated knowledge frameworks) and a philosophy of
ignorance (and loosely knit together and self-inconsistent faith tenets), where
evolution represents the former and creationism the latter. Mencken did not
think highly, at all, of the context of Tennessee or the system of
jurisprudence in place.[2]
In line with the tenor of this
‘debate’ through time, the proceedings of the trial garnered “world attention”
with a “promised confrontation between fundamentalist literal belief and
liberal interpretation of the Scriptures” (The Editors of Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 2018). In Impossibility of
Obtaining Fair Jury (1925c), Mencken opened commentary on the trial of John
T. Scopes, opining:
The trial of the infidel Scopes, beginning here this hot, lovely morning, will greatly resemble, I suspect, the trial of a prohibition agent accused of mayhem in Union Hill, N.J. That is to say, it will be conducted with the most austere regard for the highest principles of jurisprudence. Judge and jury will go to extreme lengths to assure the prisoner the last and least of his rights. He will be protected in his person and feelings by the full military and naval power of the State of Tennessee. No one will be permitted to pull his nose, to pray publicly for his condemnation or even to make a face at him. But all the same he will be bumped off inevitably when the time comes, and to the applause of all right-thinking men. The real trial, in truth, will not begin until Scopes is convicted and ordered to the hulks.
The defense was Clarence Darrow,
originally a corporate lawyer and later a “champion of labor, proponent of the
poor and defender of the most-hopeless of death row cases” (Frail, 2011). The
prosecution was William Jennings Bryan (The Editors of Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 2018). Interestingly, the two men, Darrow and Bryan, were aligned
in the 1896 presidential election (Frail, 2011).[3]
Apparently, Darrow didn’t care for Bryan as a person at the time, even seeing
the man as hyper-religious and excruciatingly idiotic (Ibid.). Mencken took
this same attitudinal stance of Bryan (Mencken, 1925m).
Straight with the opinion,
cutting with the remarks, cunning with the wit albeit cruel, the Mencken tenor
continued throughout the coverage of the Scopes Trial by Mencken. He saw the
trial as determined before and during the proceedings.[4]
The 1920s trial, in a way, reflected the changing mores and tensions between
the traditionalist Victorian types fearing the change of ways in the nation and
the modernist intellectuals who wanted to flourish more in their mentalities
about the ways of the world, in this case the natural world (Linder, n.d.). Even
in spite of some citizens’ disbelief, they feel the need to believe, at the
time. In Sickening Doubts About Value of
Publicity (1925b), Mencken speaks of Bryan in distrust and as,
fundamentally, a charlatan:
The trial of Scopes is possible here simply because it can be carried on here without heat — because no one will lose any sleep even if the devil comes to the aid of Darrow and Malone, and Bryan gets a mauling. The local intelligentsia venerate Bryan as a Christian, but it was not as a Christian that they called him in, but as one adept at attracting the newspaper boys — in brief, as a showman. As I have said, they now begin to mistrust the show, but they still believe that he will make a good one, win or lose.
The showdown, purportedly, of the
time came in the form of the Scopes Trial between the traditionalists and the
modernists, or the creationists and the evolutionists (Linder, n.d.). By the
end of the trial, the judge in the case decided “any test of the law’s
constitutionality or argument on the validity of the theory” should be ruled
out (The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2018). As noted by Mencken in Trial as Religious Orgy, Dayton,
Tennessee was not a favorable location for Scopes, “…evangelical Christianity
is one hundred per cent triumphant… It may seem fabulous, but it is a sober
fact that a sound Episcopalian or even a Northern Methodist would be regarded
as virtually an atheist in Dayton. Here the only genuine conflict is between
true believers” (Mencken, 1925d).
He continued to remark on the
prejudicial nature of the whole affair with the “local primates” in support of
a man who “confessed that he was prejudiced against evolution” via “hearty
round of applause from the crowd” (Ibid.). He described the situation as
“resolving itself into the trial of a man by his sworn enemies,” where one “local
pastor led off with a prayer calling on god to put down heresy” and the judge,
himself, “charged the grand jury to protect the schools against subversive
ideas” (Ibid.). Mencken reported on the basic inability of the Evangelical
Christian community to imagine an individual who does not accept the “literal
authority of the Bible” and who must,
if he rejects the divine Word of the Lord, be misunderstanding the basic
written word of He on High (Ibid.).
Indeed, and as one may expect in
a sufficiently large enough population, he described a person for who the Bible became the light of their life,
and the cloud of their intellect, stating, “One of these holy men wears a sign
on his back announcing that he is the Bible champion of the world. He told me
today that he had studied the Bible four hours a day for thirty-three years,
and that he had devised a plan of salvation that would save the worst sinner
ever heard of, even a scientist, a theater actor or a pirate on the high seas,
in forty days” (Ibid.).
He saw few genuine skeptics ever combatting with the
locals; if a true skeptic exists in these parts, and during those times,
Mencken would consider these individuals simply amongst those who keep mostly
or only to themselves (Ibid.). Rumours abounded, as written, “Darrow himself,
indeed, is as much as they can bear. The whisper that he is an atheist has been
stilled by the bucolic make-up and by the public report that he has the gift of
prophecy and can reconcile Genesis and evolution,” where “Darwin is the devil
with seven tails and nine horns” (Mencken, 1925e). Humorously, Mencken told a
coda tale in miniature:
…and there
arose out of the darkness a woman with her hair pulled back into a little tight
knot. She began so quietly that we couldn’t hear what she said, but soon her
voice rose resonantly and we could follow her. She was denouncing the reading
of books. Some wandering book agent, it appeared, had come to her cabin and
tried to sell her a specimen of his wares. She refused to touch it. Why,
indeed, read a book? If what was in it was true then everything in it was
already in the Bible. If it was false then reading it would imperil the soul.
Her syllogism complete, she sat down. (Mencken, 1925e).
A whole series of
individuals akin to this self-trotting out woman sprinkle the news work of
Mencken.[5] He remarked in Darrow’s Eloquent Appeal (1925f) on the
iniquity befalling the locals through the speech of Darrow, who, in essence,
never had a chance. But in his peculiar wisdom, Mencken cautioned:
I sincerely hope that the nobility and gentry of the
lowlands will not make the colossal mistake of viewing this trial of Scopes as
a trivial farce. Full of rustic japes and in bad taste, it is, to be sure,
somewhat comic on the surface. One laughs to see lawyers sweat. The jury,
marched down Broadway, would set New York by the ears. But all of that is only
skin deep. Deeper down there are the beginnings of a struggle that may go on to
melodrama of the first caliber, and when the curtain falls at least all the
laughter may be coming from the yokels. You probably laughed at the
prohibitionists, say, back in 1914. Well, don’t make the same error twice. (Mencken, 1925f)
We will come back to this point
on efficacy and wariness of the methodology, though right in the arrow and
sufficient with the quill, potentially, wrong in the weapon. Nonetheless, from
top-to-bottomless pit, the State of Tennessee, now headed by Haslam, retained
at the moment of the trial astonishing protections against the better educated
peoples of the legislature and state. By July 15, 1925, the trial began to heat
up (Mencken, 1925g).
The police were present more.
Mencken reported, “The cops have come up from Chattanooga to help save Dayton
from the devil. Darrow, Malone and Hays, of course, are immune to constabulary
process, despite their obscene attack upon prayer. But all other atheists and
anarchists now have public notice they must shut up forthwith and stay shut so
long as they pollute this bright, shining, buckle of the Bible belt with their
presence” (Ibid.). His interaction with an officer was interesting enough,
where they reflected the observation of “the ordinary statutes… reinforced by
Holy Writ, and whenever there is a conflict Holy Writ takes precedence”
(Mencken, 1925g).[6]
“The cards seem to be stacked
against poor Scopes, but there may be a joker in the pack. Four of the jurymen,
as everyone knows, are Methodists, and a Methodist down here belongs to the
extreme wing of liberals. Beyond him lie only the justly and incurably damned,”
Mencken, in some sense, hoped and lamented at the same time (Mencken, 1925g).
But he, Mencken, also remarked on
obedience to the words of Bryan, who went into the mess for fame and other
forms of value in notoriety. He spoke of the ways in which Bryan during the trial,
not after, became a vanguard of the faithful and the Christ-bitten. Mencken
stated:
…the old mountebank, Bryan, is no longer thought of as a mere politician
and jobseeker in these Godly regions, but has become converted into a great
sacerdotal figure, half man and half archangel — in brief, a sort of
fundamentalist pope. The other is that the fundamentalist mind, running in a
single rut for fifty years, is now quite unable to comprehend dissent from its
basic superstitions, or to grant any common honesty, or even any decency, to
those who reject them. (Mencken, 1925h)
In this, both the inability to
accept the critique and facts of the theory of evolution, even propounded in an
educational institution or uttered in the Tennessean court of God Almighty.
Bryan, as the one heading the charge, at the time, against Darrow and Scopes,
became someone automatically instilled into the halls of the respectable,
trustworthy, and almost those worthy of worship. However, as this progressed
and the trial continued onward, Mencken would not mince words about Bryan, who
appeared to begin to have health problems during the trial or after it.[7]
Mencken stated, “A typical
Tennessee politician is the Governor, Austin Peay. He signed the anti-evolution
bill with loud hosannas, and he is now making every effort to turn the
excitement of the Scopes trial to his private political uses” (Mencken, 1925i).
That is to say, Mencken notes the basic ways in which ignorance becomes the
fashion of the fancy and the fanciful alike, but of utility to the political
types. There was even stunning giveaway as
to the nature of the entire ‘legal’ enterprise with the leading lady of light,
and ‘truth’ and ‘justice,’ could reign supreme.[8] When Stewart was queried
by Hays about the opportunity to give the other side a chance to present its
evidence, the statement from Stewart, “That which strikes at the very
foundations of Christianity is not entitled to a chance” (Mencken, 1925i).
In a moderated and somewhat serious, and almost out of
character pedagogic, state of mind, Mencken, ever the feminine and a
well-formed realist, starkly said:
Darrow has lost this case. It was lost long before he came to Dayton. But it seems to me that he has nevertheless performed a great public service by fighting it to a finish and in a perfectly serious way. Let no one mistake it for comedy, farcical though it may be in all its details. It serves notice on the country that Neanderthal man is organizing in these forlorn backwaters of the land, led by a fanatic, rid sense and devoid of conscience. Tennessee, challenging him too timorously and too late, now sees its courts converted into camp meetings and its Bill of Rights made a mock of by its sworn officers of the law. There are other States that had better look to their arsenals before the Hun is at their gates. (Mencken, 1925j)
This triumph of faith over fact,
of non-science over science, of emotional appeals over reasoned argument, and
of literature over evidenced presents one of the central problems of the
current period and of the time of Mencken’s harsh criticism and most well-known
journalistic work. The law bent towards
injustice and the incorporation of religion into it, in violation of basic
principles of secularism, but with the raucous approbation and approval of the
Dayton and, indeed, majority of the Tennessean public.
Mencken remarked on the
simplistic view of the world and the basis in consolation of hell for the
unbelievers and heaven for the true faithful.[9]
He also spoke to the ways in which the Butler
Act would lead to the immediate detriment of the educational system for
Tennessee, and how its enactment would steadily erode and degrade – in quality
and respect – the educational system of the state, explaining, “With the
anti-evolution law enforced, the State university will rapidly go to pot; no
intelligent youth will waste his time upon its courses if he can help it. And
so, with the young men lost, the struggle against darkness will become almost
hopeless”(Mencken, 1925k).
The stark limits of the Scopes
“Monkey” Trial came down to a singular, not even inquiry but, query: did Scopes
teach the heathen evolution by natural selection? By all levels of the public,
the law, the cultural mores, state attitudes, educational standards, and
judicial enforcers, the answer: indeed, Scopes did commit the crime. Convicted
of the crime of science education of the young in the state of Tennessee,
Scopes earned the fine of $100 (Linder, n.d.).
Of the more scathing comparisons
of the forms of mind possible amidst the trial, Mencken (1925a) opined:
The popularity of Fundamentalism among the inferior orders of men is
explicable in exactly the same way. The cosmogonies that educated men toy with
are all inordinately complex. To comprehend their veriest outlines requires an
immense stock of knowledge, and a habit of thought. It would be as vain to try
to teach to peasants or to the city proletariat as it would be to try to teach
them to streptococci. But the cosmogony of Genesis is so simple that even a
yokel can grasp it. It is set forth in a few phrases. It offers, to an ignorant
man, the irresistible reasonableness of the nonsensical. So, he accepts it with
loud hosannas, and has one more excuse for hating his betters.
His coverage, though rather
biased and humorous, notes the starker differences in attitudes and opinions
about unguided evolution by natural selection amongst those given a formal
higher education. Given the current statistics in the United States, the number
of Young Earth Creationists, though an extreme view as seen in the Ark
Encounter or Answers in Genesis, remains high even in the current period.
With an appeal, the state Supreme Court acquitted Scopes
on a technicality – to their credit – while also upholding the law against the
teaching of evolution – to their demerit, where the acquittal was based on
being “fined excessively” (Ibid.). However, the law was only finally repealed
in 1967 (Ibid.). In a single move, in less than a year, barely over half of
one, almost half a century of students remained ignorant of the reality of
evolution in its full breadth and grandeur.
Quoting Mencken, not all, but
many Americans, including and especially Tennesseans in this case, got it good
and hard for forty years after the trial, he remarked:
Once more, alas, I find myself unable to follow the best Liberal thought. What the World’s contention amounts to, at bottom, is simply the doctrine that a man engaged in combat with superstition should be very polite to superstition. This, I fear, is nonsense. The way to deal with superstition is not to be polite to it, but to tackle it with all arms, and so rout it, cripple it, and make it forever infamous and ridiculous. (Mencken, 1925l)
But with typical acuity of
rendering the heart of the matter into text, Mencken described the misinterpretation,
in standard cultural parlance of the time, of the meaning of freedom of
religion or “religious freedom (Mencken, 1925l). He sees the common
misunderstanding as viewing not only the freedom to believe and preach the
religion but also to have, in some manner, an immunity from public opinion and
governmental control in any regard; whereas, Mencken stated:
A dunderhead gets himself a long-tailed coat, rises behind the sacred
desk, and emits such bilge as would gag a Hottentot. Is it to pass
unchallenged? If so, then what we have is not religious freedom at all, but the
most intolerable and outrageous variety of religious despotism. Any fool, once
he is admitted to holy orders, becomes infallible. Any half-wit, by the simple
device of ascribing his delusions to revelation, takes on an authority that is
denied to all the rest of us. I do not know how many Americans entertain the
ideas defended so ineptly by poor Bryan, but probably the number is very large.
They are preached once a week in at least a hundred thousand rural churches,
and they are heard too in the meaner quarters of the great cities.
Nevertheless, though they are thus held to be sound by millions, these ideas
remain mere rubbish. Not only are they not supported by the known facts; they
are in direct contravention of the known facts. No man whose information is
sound and whose mind functions normally can conceivably credit them. They are
the products of ignorance and stupidity, either or both. (Ibid.)
Concluding
the reportage, “But it was Darrow who carried the main burden, and Darrow who
shaped the final result. When he confronted Bryan at last, the whole combat
came to its climax. On the one side was bigotry, ignorance, hatred,
superstition, every sort of blackness that the human mind is capable of. On the
other side was sense. And sense achieved a great victory” (Mencken, 1925l). In
this unabashed and impossibly positive reportage and opining, Mencken gives the
method its form and, thus, its content, where the enemy, Bryan, must be
destroyed and the ally, Darrow, shall be haloed.
This, probably
most clearly, can be observed in the multiple publications and statements about
Bryan immediately and then shortly after death. Mencken, in Darrow’s Eloquent Appeal, made an
incorrect prediction, too, by the way, speaking of Bryan “He may last five
years, ten years or even longer” (1925f). In fact, Bryan died shortly after the trial;
Mencken gave him a rather cruel and direct obituary, where Mencken excoriated
the late Bryan – more than once:
Has it been duly
marked by historians that William Jennings Bryan’s last secular act on this
globe of sin was to catch flies? A curious detail, and not without its sardonic
overtones. He was the most sedulous fly-catcher in American history, and in
many ways the most successful. His quarry, of course, was not Musca domestica
but Homo neandertalensis…
Bryan lived too long, and descended too deeply into the mud, to be taken seriously hereafter by fully literate men, even of the kind who write schoolbooks… The truth is that even Bryan’s sincerity will probably yield to what is called, in other fields, definitive criticism… This talk of sincerity, I confess, fatigues me. If the fellow was sincere, then so was P. T. Barnum. The word is disgraced and degraded by such uses. He was, in fact, a charlatan, a mountebank, a zany without sense or dignity. His career brought him into contact with the first men of his time; he preferred the company of rustic ignoramuses…
… The artful
Darrow led him on: he repeated it, ranted for it, bellowed it in his cracked
voice. So, he was prepared for the final slaughter. He came into life a hero, a
Galahad, in bright and shining armor. He was passing out a poor mountebank.[10](Mencken, 1925m)
Although, these
forms of ridicule and statement can come out into the public domain.[11] Publications will accept
them. The adoring fan base and public will love them. The hurt via religion may
even sadistically enjoy the scolding. However, these may not help with the outreach
to the mislead or the infuse critical thought as a way of thinking rather than
simply as a set of empirical productions in the play of science, as only a body
of naturalistic knowledge.
Let’s take the modern case of Kirk Cameron, a Biblical Literalist, Evangelical Activist, and Fundamentalist Christian Documentarian, he argues for working around the critical faculties of the non-believer, as, obviously, this works less and less with modern education and the infecting of the public mind with scientific rationalism, where Cameron’s colleague, Ray Comfort, agrees with the tactic (Comfort, 2003; Powderwombat, 2010). Mencken’s technique can be done. One can take the diverse vocabulary of Mencken and clever display of mockery, to his sagacity-in-witticisms and high-snark-wordplay – in other words, to (exaggerated) wit:
—
*The Young Earth
Creationist movement belies a certain proficiency in forced, and celebrated, unknowing
– as if an unbirthday, where the presents for every day, save one to be ignored
and hidden in the attic to gather dust at all costs, of the year comes wrapped
in illogic, tied-up and bowed in stupefying bromide-full decoys and
terror-tactics, and, upon opening of the ‘gift,’ shows itself containing the
dullest-senses observations and among the more childish theories ever invented
in the history of the human species – with secured ignorance and an admirable
efficiency in deluding the minds of the young, and the more uninformed and
already misinformed sectors of the general public, comes in armies of the
brainless and spine-full of humanity.
Who knew corals and
jellyfish could exist in human form? Those in whom dumb becomes not only
congenital & acquired but also super-descriptive, as in a super-set trait
to provide an explanatory framework for all other outputs, behaviourally and
verbally – and, indeed, mentally, though unknown to the harbourer of this
diligent, thorough, conscientious, and ever-present and persistent master of
mind. But this also indicates a peculiar acumen in assured, triumphal
ignorance, and oafish, immature certainty of a mule ensemble in targeting the
vulnerable sentimentalities and soft-spots of the public conscience instead of
intellectual capacities.
Kirk
Cameron, well-known ignoble steed, of whom much can remain unsaid while some
may be stated, he, once, spoke of circumnavigating rational faculties – of
“circumnavigating the intellect” – as if this equates to a virtuous act or a
reflection of virtue in character, which only tells the tall and, likely,
lifelong tale of a man incapable of deep reflective thought, and so needing to
resort to such measures in attempts at conversion of the heathen-out-yonder in
the outlying lands of sin within Sodom and Gomorrah while also lacking the
intelligence to pull off the dishonest conversionary liar-and-dim-stone stunt.
Known for his
intellectual steam power in the electronic age, this enchinodermata Homo
Sapiens sans Descartian cogito, or perhaps “Homo Boobiens,” represents a person
for who the Hero’s Journey is not seventeen steps but one – and to whom the
Tragicomedian’s Journey remains more appropriate as this is every step ever
taken, where all paths for this eternally archetypal tragicomic hero lead to
robust certitudes and ignorance as our wayward would-be Jonah adventurer gets stuck
in the belly of the whale unwilling to be pooped out – possibly because the ‘food’
for the poor gargantuan cetacean amounts to among the most intellectually
non-nutritive collocations of atoms ever amassed and agglomerated – and thereby
unmetamorphosed and still unsurprisingly made of the self-same excremental
material, always landing in the same position whilst continually spinning in
circles, as if a top, in the mastery of the far-flung-imaginary and with the
high-falutin’ stature of the foolhardy fool leaving not himself but everyone
else in dizzying confusion as to what was just uttered with, all the while, a
smile of a simpleton’s blank face tinged with the hardy scent of hometown dustbowl
emptiness, the senseless and ignorant of sense ignoramus – albeit an honest,
sincere, and striving donkey, in effortful, besweated, and dull proselytizing,
where even the grass grows weary of his prickish advances.
A stultifying display of
the highest ignobles and a man among the greatest viceroys of the basest vices
with bold pride binding to anti-Faustian bargains, where the man manages to
make the hefty bet, gain nothing and also lose nothing, and still thinks he
acquired something, already knows everything, and remains perfectly wrong on
both counts as surely as a cube has twenty-four right-angles, i.e., overt
arrogance, inked ironically in a theology of the humble-virgin born-and-sacrificed
carpenter, and illusory comprehension tied with inescapable jackassery and dunderheadedness,
matched only in his Tennessean creationist tenacity as in his own dumbassery.
By the powers vested through Castle Greyface and Palace Numskull, he wields the power of the Major General at the heights of Mount Zion’s cloud-headed; a man who is the leader of the pack of Mount Olympus heading the charge of the Godly know-nothings; an admiral with an ocean’s worth of sunk intellectual costs, based on words said, reaching the depths of the Marianas Trench; a man who never even knew the man who knew too much, and was a man who never knew much, too; a mathematician tabulating his cognitive contents in at the invention of zero; a philosopher of the first-rate in empty phrases and deep inanities, who when finished in their evacuation from his tiresome mouth and dispensing in endless vacuities leaves Cameron’s clodhopper skull to implode with stunning quickness that collapsed stars doomed to become black holes can only aspire to and even blush in reflection upon the swiftness of the eventuality, and where neutron stars only dream of the thickness of his skull in the first place.
As clownish as this act
and ideas may seem in the instant gloss of the moment, there can also appear
the base metal underneath the fool’s gold coating of the uttermost fool;
Cameron intends this not only as high-minded and under-handed personal tactics
of conversion of Satan’s fiendish lost – coming from a low intellect even
over-rated then – but also as clear, down-home, chummy, brotherly, and deranged
advice for fundamentalist religious believers in Christ Almighty to intake on faith and to reach out to the unsaved
Pagan peoples of Mordor and followers of the
faithless Sauron and incarnation of evil, Melkor. Where is Eru when you
need Him? Pray, then tell.
If it weren’t for his ineradicable dopiness and hopelessly clumsy demeanour, and empty-faced – and headed – naivety, the sheer act and behaviour of reaching out in his own manner would harbour something akin to southern charm from a mental mute and donnish deaf-dork, without the south or the charm. A tremendous talent for tactless tact; an undeniable ability in blatant nuance and blowhard whispers, and platitudinous wisdom; someone not bound to the phrase “unfathomably stupid” because the depths can be plumbed, roundly, and many times with stunning and astonishing rapidity, based on their distance from veracity and fathomable shallowness and sheer audacity of idiocy, in whose dopiness secures his own derision in public – and deservedly so in private as well.
Snark, in this Mencken
manner, even of He-Haw the Asshat Cretin-King unable to even rise to the level
popular sophistry and anti-intellectualism, becomes cheap-shot, though imaginative,
while also, unfortunately, uncivil in contradistinction to the elitist wordsmith-bootsniffing
and Gibraltarian climbing and posturing of Mencken, reflexively indicative to
the male weakness not of sentimentality in this case but of vanity, as noted by
none other than Mencken himself (In
Defense of Women).
He also noted the
strength in women as non-sentimentality, in realism – indeed, as the supreme
realists of the species, potentially overlooking or missing the deeper historical
context for most women for hundreds and thousands of years: not much to feel
nostalgic about, exactly, especially in the precarious nature of women’s lives
under Christendom and other dominant religions read as instruction manuals, in
part or whole, for the construction and maintenance of patriarchal culture,
where women not only get listed as but, in literal fact, are property, chattel.
The closest intimation for the poor young fool, Cameron, of this reality for
women in general may come only in the form of himself as the Bell-Dame of the
Bamboozled. Chesterton took on the same view, “Women are
the only realists; their whole object in life is to pit their realism against
the extravagant, excessive, and occasionally drunken idealism of men,” as a
mirror of the chrestomathic pithy life axioms of Mencken.
The perspicacious
vulgarity and mean nature of this snarkiness technique in word simply brings
about an inefficacious and, indeed, counterproductive means by which to reach
the minds and feelings of the wider public in the general populace and the
specific public in one’s (supposed or purported) opposition and enemies. Plus,
of the chief weaknesses of personal attacks, no matter how contrived, retains a
substructure of the cheap and easy, and a representation of a shallower and
more stunted than necessary emotional life.
Aggressive
and, at times, deserved taunts and jeers will not change the attitudes of the
individual, including Cameron, or garner the sympathies of the speaker’s
audience or, more properly, stimulate critical faculties, but may, in rarer
instances, engender, in its more noble manifestations, wider general public
skepticism about the mountebanks and modern Pharisees marked by worship of
Mammon and feigned devotion to God on High, so does not, at root, amount to an
effective means by which to extricate and extirpate the utterly sincere
religious fanatics bound by fears of hell and promises, nay hopes, of heaven
with the tremendous to-the-death motivational propulsion system of unquestioned
zeal and unquery-able fervor.
The only means by which to change the
current state, whether the end to slavery or women’s suffrage, or better
working conditions, comes from mass public organization and pushes for
improvements in the awareness of the public, and, in this particular instance,
changes to the educational systems that currently are producing motivated,
indoctrinated, and ill-informed spokesdolts for fundamentalist ideologies,
which points to a weakness in the critiques of Mencken in some sense: the Nietzschean
elitism linked to racism – thus anti-humanist, who sees an imaginary crime in
the pseudoscientifically-premised act of miscegenation, and somewhat detached
disdain for general welfare, in addition to the remarkable leap of faith for an
unbeliever sufficient to jumpstart what would become Objectivism with
laissez-faire economic, social, and political views.
Of the views presaging the movement of the computerized ideologues writ Randroids seeing others simply as losers, clingers, parasites, a national majority tribe and international collective of the deserved penurity, worthy of dishonor and miseducation as they are petulant hangers-on, and selflessly deluded Christian sheep of the lower castes of humankind bound to their delusions and fate in poverty worthy of ridicule, distrust, and given a predetermined lowly estate in life, for ever, until death does them – and the higher class of ubermenschen who hold fast to the utmost industriousness, assiduous work ethic, and titles as maverick-nobles, as the downtrodden American Businessman standing against the masses of the insolent and lazy – a favour of ridding the Earth of them.*
—
The work here seems
easy to some degree. Mocking not only the beliefs of the public, Mencken also
took the time to lay out the objections. Ridicule, at times, may work. However,
the tactic will, more often than not, raise emotional walls and intellectual
defenses. This cannot be ignored, as human beings are not simply floating
thinkers. The techne of Mencken,
though done to a relatively high level, does not represent the best means by
which to reach the wider public, to educate as well as inform, or to instill
the protective measures of critical thinking, where this would help in
critiques of fundamentalist ideologies, whether coming from literal religion or
defenses of state violence, aggression, and rights-violations around the world.
In this sense, the pattern of
emotions runs a course of hilarity at the surface impression, horror as the
reality sets in, and pity and compassion for the individuals, and anger at a
failed educational system; in an information age, individual citizens, and the
young especially, do not want ignorance, or worse the illusion of knowledge,
but, rather, remain kept ignorant by dubious and deliberate work by
fundamentalist religion and its, often male, handlers.
The American public’s educational system, and in this case the legal system as well, disserved the general populace’s ability to know about the world abounding around them and the reality of far more unanswered than even marginally answered queries, even so-called ‘big questions,’ in the disciplines carved in the humanities and the sciences. The general public has been wronged with bad education, not only in America but elsewhere. A healthier proactive approach to teaching modern science would be more helpful than elitism, mockery, and disdain – how ever entertaining.
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Fair Trial Is Beyond Ken. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
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(1925a, June 29). Homo Neanderthalensis. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
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Law and Freedom. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
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Malone the Victor. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
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Sickening Doubts About Value of Publicity. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
Mencken, H.L.
(1925e, July 13). Souls Need Reconversion Nightly. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
Mencken, H.L.
(1925k, July 20). Tennessee in the Frying Pan. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
Mencken, H.L. (1925d, July 11).
Trial as a Religious Orgy. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
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Britannica. (2018, August 1). Scopes Trial. Retrieved from https://www.britannica.com/event/Scopes-Trial.
—
Photo by Oscar Toledo on Unsplash
[1] Tennessee’s Butler Act (2018), in part, states in a quotation:
…it shall be unlawful for any teacher in any of the
Universities, Normals and all other public schools of the State which are
supported in whole or in part by the public school funds of the State, to teach
any theory that denies the story of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the
Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of
animals.
Scoville,
H. (2018, February 25). Tennessee’s Butler Act. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/the-butler-act-1224753.
[2] Sickening Doubts About Value of Publicity (1925b), in part, states:
The basic issues of the case, indeed, seem to be very little discussed
at Dayton. What interests everyone are its mere strategy. By what device,
precisely, will Bryan trim old Clarence Darrow? Will he do it gently and with
every delicacy of forensics, or will he wade in on high gear and make a swift
butchery of it? For no one here seems to doubt that Bryan will win — that is,
if the bout goes to a finish. What worries the town is the fear that some
diabolical higher power will intervene on Darrow’s side — that is, before
Bryan heaves him through the ropes.
Mencken, H.L. (1925b, July 9).
Sickening Doubts About Value of Publicity. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[3] Everything You Didn’t Know About Clarence Darrow (2011) states:
You had the growth of the Populist movement—a
widespread feeling out in the West and Midwest that the financiers of the East
were using the gold standard to keep the average farmer and the average working
man in poverty. For the first time, in Chicago in 1896 [at the Democratic
National Convention], you had a major party declare that it was going to
represent the poor. That was Bryan’s amazing feat of political rhetoric: he was
this young, unknown congressman and he stood up there and he captivated that
convention hall and brought the Populists and the Democrats together.
Darrow was part of that same movement, but he never
particularly cared for Bryan as a person. He thought Bryan was too religious
and basically too stupid to lead a major party, and it really grated on him
that Bryan got the presidential nomination three times. So their rivalry began
to simmer and fester, and when Darrow had a chance to ambush Bryan in the
courtroom in Dayton, Tennessee, in 1925, he took full advantage of it.
Frail,
T.A. (2011, June 10). Everything You Didn’t Know About Clarence Darrow.
Retrieved from https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/everything-you-didnt-know-about-clarence-darrow-14990899/.
[4] In Impossibility of Obtaining Fair Jury (1925c), in part, states:
There is absolutely no bitterness on tap. But neither is there any doubt. It has been decided by acclamation, with only a few infidels dissenting, that the hypothesis of evolution is profane, inhumane and against God, and all that remains is to translate that almost unanimous decision into the jargon of the law and so have done. The town boomers have banqueted Darrow as well as Bryan, but there is no mistaking which of the two has the crowd, which means the venire of tried and true men. Bryan has been oozing around the country since his first day here, addressing this organization and that, presenting the indubitable Word of God in his caressing, ingratiating way, and so making unanimity doubly unanimous.
Mencken, H.L. (1925c, July 10).
Impossibility of Obtaining Fair Jury. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[5] Souls Need Reconversion Nightly (1925e), in part, states:
There followed a
hymn, led by a somewhat fat brother wearing silver-rimmed country spectacles.
It droned on for half a dozen stanzas, and then the first speaker resumed the
floor. He argued that the gift of tongues was real and that education was a
snare. Once his children could read the Bible, he said, they had enough. Beyond
lay only infidelity and damnation. Sin stalked the cities. Dayton itself was a
Sodom. Even Morgantown had begun to forget God. He sat down, and the female
aurochs in gingham got up.
Mencken, H.L.
(1925e, July 13). Souls Need Reconversion Nightly. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[6] Law and Freedom (1925g), in part,
presented an interested dialogue reported by Mencken between an enforcer of the
law and himself:
The captain in charge of the squad now on watch told
me frankly yesterday that he was not going to let any infidels discharge their
damnable nonsense upon the town. I asked him what charge he would lay against
them if they flouted him. He said he would jail them for disturbing the peace.
“But
suppose,” I asked him, “a prisoner is actually not disturbing the
peace. Suppose he is simply saying his say in a quiet and orderly manner.”
“I’ll arrest him anyhow,” said the cop.
“Even if no one complains of him?”
“I’ll complain myself.”
“Under what law precisely?”
“We don’t need no law for them kind of
people.”
Mencken,
H.L. (1925g, July 15). Law and Freedom. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[7] Fair Trial is Beyond Ken (1925h), in part, states:
Bryan sat silent throughout the whole scene, his gaze fixed immovably on the witness. Now and then his face darkened and his eyes flashed, but he never uttered a sound. It was, to him, a string of blasphemies out of the devil’s mass — a dreadful series of assaults upon the only true religion. The old gladiator faced his real enemy at last. Here was a sworn agent and attorney of the science he hates and fears — a well-fed, well-mannered spokesman of the knowledge he abominates. Somehow he reminded me pathetically of the old Holy Roller I heard last week — the mountain pastor who damned education as a mocking and a corruption. Bryan, too, is afraid of it, for wherever it spreads his trade begins to fall off, and wherever it flourishes he is only a poor clown…
It is a tragedy, indeed, to begin life as a hero and to end it as a
buffoon. But let no one, laughing at him, underestimate the magic that lies in
his black, malignant eye, his frayed but still eloquent voice. He can shake and
inflame these poor ignoramuses as no other man among us can shake and inflame
them, and he is desperately eager to order the charge.
Mencken,
H.L. (1925h, July 16). Fair Trial Is Beyond Ken. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
In a note mixed with charity, pity, ridicule, and degradation in one, in
Malone the Victor (1925i), Mencken
explained and opined:
Bryan has been roving around in the tall grass for years and he knows the bucolic mind. He knows how to reach and inflame its basic delusions and superstitions. He has taken them into his own stock and adorned them with fresh absurdities. Today he may well stand as the archetype of the American rustic. His theology is simply the elemental magic that is preached in a hundred thousand rural churches fifty-two times a year. These Tennessee mountaineers are not more stupid than the city proletariat; they are only less informed.
Mencken, H.L. (1925i, July 17). Malone the Victor. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
Malone the Victor (1925i), in part, states:
The old boy grows more and more pathetic. He has aged greatly during the past few years and begins to look elderly and enfeebled. All that remains of his old fire is now in his black eyes. They glitter like dark gems, and in their glitter there is immense and yet futile malignancy. That is all that is left of the Peerless Leader of thirty years ago. Once he had one leg in the White House and the nation trembled under his roars. Now he is a tinpot pope in the coca-cola belt and a brother to the forlorn pastors who belabor half-wits in galvanized iron tabernacles behind the railroad yards. His own speech was a grotesque performance and downright touching in its imbecility.
Mencken,
H.L. (1925i, July 17). Malone the Victor. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[8] Malone the Victor (1925i), in part, states:
Yet even Stewart toward the close of yesterday’s session gave an exhibition that would be almost unimaginable in the North. He began his reply to Malone with an intelligent and forceful legal argument, with plenty of evidence of hard study in it. But presently he slid into a violent theological harangue, full of extravagant nonsense. He described the case as a combat between light and darkness and almost descended to the depths of Bryan. Hays challenged him with a question. Didn’t he admit, after all, that the defense had a tolerable case; that it ought to be given a chance to present its evidence? I transcribe his reply literally: “That which strikes at the very foundations of Christianity is not entitled to a chance.” Hays, plainly astounded by this bald statement of the fundamentalist view of due process, pressed the point. Assuming that the defense would present, not opinion but only unadorned fact, would Stewart still object to its admission? He replied. “Personally, yes.” “But as a lawyer and Attorney-General?” insisted Hays. “As a lawyer and Attorney-General,” said Stewart, “I am the same man.” Such is justice where Genesis is the first and greatest of law books and heresy is still a crime.
Mencken,
H.L. (1925i, July 17). Malone the Victor. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[9] Tennessee in the Frying Pan (1925k), in
part, states:
They believe that they are not mammals. They believe, on Bryan’s word, that they know more than all the men of science of Christendom. They believe, on the authority of Genesis, that the earth is flat and that witches still infest it. They believe, finally and especially, that all who doubt these great facts of revelation will go to hell. So they are consoled.
Mencken, H.L.
(1925k, July 20). Tennessee in the Frying Pan. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
Tennessee in the Frying Pan (1925k), in part,
states:
The Tennesseeans have tolerated their imbeciles for fear that attacking them would bring down the derision of the rest of the country. Now they have the derision, and to excess — and the attack is ten times as difficult as it ever was before.
Mencken, H.L.
(1925k, July 20). Tennessee in the Frying Pan. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
In Memoriam:
W.J.B. (1925m), in significant part,
states:
Has it been duly marked by historians that William
Jennings Bryan’s last secular act on this globe of sin was to catch flies? A
curious detail, and not without its sardonic overtones. He was the most
sedulous fly-catcher in American history, and in many ways the most successful.
His quarry, of course, was not Musca domestica but Homo neandertalensis…
Bryan lived too long, and descended too deeply into
the mud, to be taken seriously hereafter by fully literate men, even of the
kind who write schoolbooks… The truth is that even Bryan’s sincerity will
probably yield to what is called, in other fields, definitive criticism… This
talk of sincerity, I confess, fatigues me. If the fellow was sincere, then so
was P. T. Barnum. The word is disgraced and degraded by such uses. He was, in
fact, a charlatan, a mountebank, a zany without sense or dignity. His career
brought him into contact with the first men of his time; he preferred the
company of rustic ignoramuses…
…He seemed only a poor clod like those around him,
deluded by a childish theology, full of an almost pathological hatred of all
learning, all human dignity, all beauty, all fine and noble things. He was a
peasant come home to the barnyard. Imagine a gentleman, and you have imagined
everything that he was not. What animated him from end to end of his grotesque
career was simply ambition – the ambition of a common man to get his hand upon
the collar of his superiors, or failing that, to get his thumb into their eyes.
He was born with a roaring voice, and it had the trick of inflaming half-wits.
His whole career was devoted to raising those half-wits against their betters,
that he himself might shine. His last battle will be grossly misunderstood if
it is thought of as a mere exercise in fanaticism – that is, if Bryan the
Fundamentalist Pope is mistaken for one of the bucolic Fundamentalists…
…When he began denouncing the notion that man is a
mammal even some of the hinds at Dayton were agape. And when, brought upon
Clarence Darrow’s cruel hook, he writhed and tossed in a very fury of
malignancy, bawling against the veriest elements of sense and decency like a
man frantic – when he came to that tragic climax of his striving there were
snickers among the hinds as well as hosannas. Upon that hook, in truth, Bryan
committed suicide, as a legend as well as in the body. He staggered from the
rustic court ready to die, and he staggered from it ready to be forgotten, save
3 as a character in a third-rate farce, witless and in poor taste. It was plain
to everyone who knew him, when he came to Dayton, that his great days were behind
him – that, for all the fury of his hatred, he was now definitely an old man,
and headed at last for silence. There was a vague, unpleasant manginess about
his appearance; he somehow seemed dirty, though a close glance showed him as
carefully shaven as an actor, and clad in immaculate linen. All the hair was
gone from the dome of his head, and it had begun to fall out, too, behind his
ears, in the obscene manner of Samuel Gompers…
…When I first encountered him, on the sidewalk in
front of the office of the rustic lawyers who were his associates in the Scopes
case, the trial was yet to begin, and so he was still expansive and amiable. I
had printed in the Nation, a week or so before, an article arguing that the
Tennessee anti-evolution law, whatever its wisdom, was at least constitutional
– that the yahoos of the State had a clear right to have their progeny taught
whatever they chose, and kept secure from whatever knowledge violated their
superstitions. The old boy professed to be delighted with the argument, and
gave the gaping bystanders to understand that I was a publicist of parts…
…His eyes fascinated me; I watched them all day long.
They were blazing points of hatred. They glittered like occult and sinister
gems. Now and then they wandered to me, and I got my share, for my reports of
the trial had come back to Dayton, and he had read them. It was like coming
under fire. Thus he fought his last fight, thirsting savagely for blood. All
sense departed from him. He bit right and left, like a dog with rabies. He
descended to demagogy so dreadful that his very associates at the trial table
blushed. His one yearning was to keep his yokels hated up – to lead his forlorn
mob of imbeciles against the foe. That foe, alas, refused to be alarmed. It
insisted upon seeing the whole battle as a comedy. Even Darrow, who knew
better, occasionally yielded to the prevailing spirit. One day he lured poor
Bryan into the folly I have mentioned: his astounding argument against the
notion that man is a mammal. I am glad I heard it, for otherwise I’d never
believe it. There stood the man who had been thrice a candidate for the
Presidency of the Republic – there he stood in the glare of the world, uttering
stuff that a boy of eight would laugh at. The artful Darrow led him on: he repeated
it, ranted for it, bellowed it in his cracked voice. So he was prepared for the
final slaughter. He came into life a hero, a Galahad, in bright and shining
armor. He was passing out a poor mountebank.
Mencken,
H.L. (1925m). In Memoriam: W.J.B. Retrieved from history.msu.edu/hst203/files/2011/02/Mencken-In-Memoriam-WJB.pdf?mod=article_inline.
Bryan (1925n),
in part, states:
Bryan was a vulgar and common man, a cad undiluted. He was ignorant, bigoted, self-seeking, blatant and dishonest. His career brought him into contact with the first men of his time; he preferred the company of rustic ignoramuses. It was hard to believe, watching him at Dayton, that he had traveled, that he had been received in civilized societies, that he had been a high officer of state. He seemed only a poor clod like those around him, deluded by a childish theology, full of an almost pathological hatred of all learning, all human dignity, all beauty, all fine and noble things. He was a peasant come home to the dung-pile. Imagine a gentleman, and you have imagined everything that he was not.
Mencken,
H.L. (1925n, July 27). Bryan. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
Aftermath (1925l), in part, states:
Putting the
matter blunt and stark, Mencken compared Darrow and Bryan, opining, “Bryan went
there in a hero’s shining armor, bent deliberately upon a gross crime against
sense. He came out a wrecked and preposterous charlatan, his tail between his
legs. Few Americans have ever done so much for their country in a whole
lifetime as Darrow did in two hours.”
Mencken,
H.L. (1925l, September 14). Aftermath. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
[11] Trial as Religious Orgy (1925d), in part, states:
There is, it appears,
a conspiracy of scientists afoot. Their purpose is to break down religion,
propagate immorality, and so reduce mankind to the level of the brutes. They
are the sworn and sinister agents of Beelzebub, who yearns to conquer the
world, and has his eye especially upon Tennessee.
Mencken, H.L. (1925d, July 11). Trial as a Religious Orgy. Retrieved from https://archive.org/stream/CoverageOfTheScopesTrialByH.l.Mencken/ScopesTrialMencken.txt.
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