Difference between revisions of "John Scopes"

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'''John T. Scopes''' (1900-1970) was a young teacher in Tennessee who became the defendant in a test case for promoting evolution in American schools. Tennessee had a law against teaching human evolution, and the [[American Civil Liberties Union]] (ACLU) wanted to overturn it. It enlisted the top criminal attorney of the day, [[Clarence Darrow]], to serve as Scopes attorney. As crafty as the day is long, he arrived in Tennessee armed with his bag of tricks.
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#redirect[[Scopes Trial]]
 
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[[William Jennings Bryan]], the former presidential candidate and Secretary of State, had oratorical skills second to none. His "Cross of Gold" nomination acceptance speech in 1896 is considered one of the greatest political works in American history. He united the Populist and Democratic Parties then and laid the foundation for the takeover by the [[Democratic Party]] of American politics 36 years later.
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After witnessing the horrors of World War I, Bryan became convinced that the teaching of evolution was leading society to ruination through war. "Survival of the fittest" provided an intellectual justification for the brutal killing of other nationalities and races. Bryan foresaw the ethnic cleansing that grew to its horrible culmination in the Holocaust.
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Bryan defended the Tennessee law and its application to Scopes, with its $100 fine as the penalty for teaching evolution. Darrow agreed to take the witness stand in favor of teaching evolution if Bryan took the witness stand against it. Bryan then testified and performed well. So well, in fact, that Darrow reneged on his promise and forced Scopes to plead guilty to end the case. With that the trial ended, and Tennessee's Butler Act remained in effect for another half century, until 1967. To this day, Tennesee schools teach little evolution, and George W. Bush won the presidential election by carrying this home state of his opponent, Al Gore.
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A famous liberal reporter at this [[Scopes trial]], H.L. Mencken, published such one-sided articles that it would make today's media blush. He excoriated Bryan at every possible turn, trying to make him look foolish. When Hollywood got into the act with a movie called ''Inherit the Wind,'' it imitated Mencken's bias. Misinformed, many think Scopes and the evolutionists won the trial, but conservative rule in Tennessee today reflects the true outcome.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Scopes, John}}
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[[Category:Biographies]]
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Latest revision as of 09:35, May 11, 2009

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