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Revision as of 21:56, February 7, 2010

Welcome to Conservapedia!

Please read The Conservapedia Commandments before contributing.

Conservapedia has had over 150,000,000 page views and over 721,000 page edits.

"The truth shall set you free!"

The Weekly Toon

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Featured Article

The Gettysburg Campaign of June-July 1863 was the turning point in the American Civil War that, combined with the simultaneous loss of the Mississippi River in the west pointed toward Confederate exhaustion and defeat.

The Gettysburg Campaign

The Gettysburg campaign climaxed in the famous Battle of Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863, on the outskirts of the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, that was an overwhelming Union victory. Confederate General Robert E. Lee led his Army of Northern Virginia on a raid into Pennsylvania designed to capture supplies and destroy the political will of the Union to continue the war. He unexpectedly encountered the main Union army under General George Meade. In an intensely fought three-day battle, Lee had advantages on the first two days but lost badly on the third. He was, at that point, trapped but Meade's dilatory pursuit allowed Lee to escape. The battle became a metaphor for the entire war, and a central icon of courage on both sides. It was used by President Abraham Lincoln in his Gettysburg Address to mark the birth of a new nation dedicated to equality and democracy.

*Featured articles

Article of the Year: Evolution

In 2006, the prestigious science journal Science reported concerning the United States: "The percentage of people in the country who accept the idea of evolution has declined from 45 in 1985 to 40 in 2005. Meanwhile the fraction of Americans unsure about evolution has soared from 7 per cent in 1985 to 21 per cent last year."[1]

Discover what Wikipedia, the public school systems, and the liberal media don't want you to know about the creation vs. evolution issue.

Bible Verse

The LORD is the portion of mine inheritance and of my cup: thou maintainest my lot.

- Psalm 16:5

Historical Quote

"The educator is wrong who denies there are any absolutes - who sees no black and white or right or wrong, but just shades of gray in a world where discipline of any kind is an intolerable interference with the right of the individual."

Ronald Reagan

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