In 1981, Kenyon was recruited to be an expert witness for the creationist side in the McLean vs. Arkansas case that tested the constitutionality of Arkansas' Equal Time Legislation that mandated equal time for "creation science" and "evolution science." Kenyon flew to Arkansas to be deposed and testify during the trial. However, apparently under the influence of creationist attorney Wendell Bird (who was displeased with the defense of the creationist position by the Arkansas attorney general Steve Clark), Kenyon left town just before he was to testify:
"The attorney general presented six science witnesses, two more than had testified for the ACLU, presumably on the grounds that quantity made up for evident lack of quality. There would have been more had not a serious case of disappearing witnesses set in as the second week wore on. Dean Kenyon, a biologist from San Francisco State University, fled town after watching the demolition of four of the state's witnesses on day 1 of the second week.
So, what's the point? A smart guy thinks Evolution is wrong? That's not an argument.
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farmerman
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Sun 2 Feb, 2014 05:30 pm
@gungasnake,
He was "turned" by the Hank Morris book called "Flood Geology". Even you could see the bullshit in that story.
When he read the book he said "Im not a geologist but "Dr" Morris's book was convincing"