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« Gordy Slack replies | Main | Everyone, go say ‘Happy Birthday’ to Greg Laden »

Lenski gives Conservapædia a lesson

Category: CreationismEvolution
Posted on: June 24, 2008 11:16 AM, by PZ Myers

Once again, Richard Lenski has replied to the goons and fools at Conservapædia, and boy, does he ever outclass them. For a quick outline of the saga, read this summary at A Candid World; basically, Andy Schlafly has been demanding every bit of data from Richard Lenski's work on the evolution of E. coli, despite the fact that Schlafly doesn't have the background to understand it and doesn't have any plan for what he would do with it if he got it. Lenski has been polite and helpful in his replies; his first response is a model for how to explain difficult science to a bullying ideologue. Now his second response is available, and while he has clearly lost some patience and is unequivocal in denouncing their bad faith efforts to discredit good science, he still gives an awfully good and instructional discussion.

I've put the whole thing below the fold, in case you'd rather not click through to that wretched hive of pretentious villainy at Conservapædia.

I tried to be polite, civil and respectful in my reply to your first email, despite its rude tone and uninformed content. Given the continued rudeness of your second email, and the willfully ignorant and slanderous content on your website, my second response will be less polite. I expect you to post my response in its entirety; if not, I will make sure that is made publicly available through other channels.

I offer this lengthy reply because I am an educator as well as a scientist. It is my sincere hope that some readers might learn something from this exchange, even if you do not.

First, it seems that reading might not be your strongest suit given your initial letter, which showed that you had not read our paper, and given subsequent conversations with your followers, in which you wrote that you still had not bothered to read our paper. You wrote: "I did skim Lenski's paper ..." If you have not even read the original paper, how do you have any basis of understanding from which to question, much less criticize, the data that are presented therein?

Second, your capacity to misinterpret and/or misrepresent facts is plain in the third request in your first letter, where you said: "In addition, there is skepticism that 3 new and useful proteins appeared in the colony around generation 20,000." That statement was followed by a link to a news article from NewScientist that briefly reported on our work. I assumed you had simply misunderstood that article, because there is not even a mention of proteins anywhere in the news article. As I replied, "We make no such claim anywhere in our paper, nor do I think it is correct. Proteins do not 'appear out of the blue', in any case." So where did your confused assertion come from? It appears to have come from one of your earlier discussions, in which an acoltye (Able806, who to his credit at least seems to have attempted to read our paper) wrote:

"I think it might be best to clarify some of Richard's work. He started his E.Coli project in 1988 and has been running the project for 20 years now; his protocols are available to the general public. The New Scientist article is not very technical but the paper at PNAS is. The change was based on one of his colonies developing the ability to absorb citrate, something not found in wild E.Coli. This occurred around 31,500 generations and is based on the development of 3 proteins in the E.Coli genome. What his future work will be is to look at what caused the development of these 3 proteins around generation 20,000 of that particular colony. ..."

As further evidence of your inability to keep even a few simple facts straight, you later wrote the following: "It [my reply] did clarify that his claims are not as strong as some evolutionists have insisted." But no competent biologist would, after reading our paper with any care, insist (or even suggest) that "3 new and useful proteins appeared in the colony around generation 20,000" or any similar nonsense. It is only in your letter, and in your acolyte's confused interpretation of our paper, that I have ever seen such a claim. Am I or the reporter for NewScientist somehow responsible for the confusion that reflects your own laziness and apparent inability to distinguish between a scientific paper, a news article, and a confused summary posted by an acolyte on your own website?

Third, it is apparent to me, and many others who have followed this exchange and your on-line discussions of how to proceed, that you are not acting in good faith in requests for data. From the posted discussion on your web site, it is obvious that you lack any expertise in the relevant fields. Several of your acolytes have pointed this out to you, and that your motives are unclear or questionable at best, but you and your cronies dismissed their concerns as rants and even expelled some of them from posting on your website. [Ed.: citation omitted due to spam filter] Several also pointed out that I had very quickly and straightforwardly responded that the methods and data supporting the evolution of the citrate-utilization capacity are already provided in our paper. One poster in your discussions, Aaronp, wrote:

"I read Lenski's paper, and as a trained microbiologist, I thought that it was both thorough and well done. His claims are backed by good data, namely that which was presented in the figures. I went through each of the figures after Aschlafly said that they were uninformative. Actually, they are basic figures that show the population explosion of the bacterial cultures after the Cit+ mutation occurred. These figures show that the cultures increased in size and mass at a given timepoint, being able to do so because they had evolved a mechanism to utilize a new nutrient, without the assistance of helper plasmids. ... Lenksi's paper, while not the most definite I've seen, is still a very well-researched paper that supports its claims nicely."

(As far as I saw, Aaronp is the only poster who asserted any expertise in microbiology.) As further evidence of the absence of good-faith discussion about our research, in the discussion thread that began even before you sent your first email to me, I counted the words "fraud" or "fraudulent" being used more than 10 times, including one acolyte, TonyT, who says bluntly that I am "clearly a fraudulent hack." In the discussion thread that also includes comments after my first reply, the number of times those same words are used has increased to 20, with the word "hoax" also now entering the discussion. A few posters wisely counseled against such slander but that did not deter you. I must say, it is surprising that someone with a law degree would make, and allow on his website, so many nasty comments that implicitly and even explicitly impugn my integrity, and by extension that of my collaborators, without any grounds whatsoever and reflecting only your dogmatic adherence to certain beliefs.

Finally, let me now turn to our data. As I said before, the relevant methods and data about the evolution of the citrate-using bacteria are in our paper. In three places in our paper, we did say "data not shown", which is common in scientific papers owing to limitations in page length, especially for secondary or minor points. None of the places where we made such references concern the existence of the citrate-using bacteria; they concern only certain secondary properties of those bacteria. We will gladly post those additional data on my website.

It is my impression that you seem to think we have only paper and electronic records of having seen some unusual E. coli. If we made serious errors or misrepresentations, you would surely like to find them in those records. If we did not, then - as some of your acolytes have suggested - you might assert that our records are themselves untrustworthy because, well, because you said so, I guess. But perhaps because you did not bother even to read our paper, or perhaps because you aren't very bright, you seem not to understand that we have the actual, living bacteria that exhibit the properties reported in our paper, including both the ancestral strain used to start this long-term experiment and its evolved citrate-using descendants. In other words, it's not that we claim to have glimpsed "a unicorn in the garden" - we have a whole population of them living in my lab! [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Unicorn_in_the_Garden] And lest you accuse me further of fraud, I do not literally mean that we have unicorns in the lab. Rather, I am making a literary allusion. [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allusion]

One of your acolytes, Dr. Richard Paley, actually grasped this point. He does not appear to understand the practice and limitations of science, but at least he realizes that we have the bacteria, and that they provide "the real data that we [that's you and your gang] need". Here's what this Dr. Paley had to say:

"I think there's a great deal of misunderstanding here from the critics of Mr. Schlafly and obfuscation on the part of Prof. Lenski and his supporters. The real data that we need are not in the paper. Rather they are in the bacteria used in the experiments themselves. Prof. Lenski claims that these bacteria 'evolved' novel traits and that these were preceded by the evolution of 'potentiated genotypes', from which the traits could be 'reevolved' using preserved colonies from those generations. But how are we to know if these traits weren't 'potentiated' by the Creator when He designed the bacteria thousands of years ago, such that they would eventually reveal themselves when the time was right? The only way this can be settled is if we have access to the genetic sequences of the bacteria colonies so that we can apply CSI techniques and determine if these 'potentiated genotypes' originated through blind chance or intelligence. But with the physical specimens in the hands of Darwinists, who claim they will get around to the sequencing at some unspecifed future time, how can we trust that this data will be forthcoming and forthright? Thus, Prof. Lenski et al. should supply Conservapedia, as stewards, with samples of the preserved E. coli colonies so that the data can be accessible to unbiased researchers outside of the hegemony of the Darwinian academia, even if it won't be put to immediate examination by Mr. Schlafly. This is simply about keeping tax-payer-funded scientists honest."

So, will we share the bacteria? Of course we will, with competent scientists. Now, if I was really mean, I might only share the ancestral strain, and let the scientists undertake the 20 years of our experiment. Or if I was only a little bit mean, maybe I'd also send the potentiated bacteria, and let the recipients then repeat the several years of incredibly pain-staking work that my superb doctoral student, Zachary Blount, performed to test some 40 trillion (40,000,000,000,000) cells, which generated 19 additional citrate-using mutants. But I'm a nice guy, at least when treated with some common courtesy, so if a competent scientist asks for them, I would even send a sample of the evolved E. coli that now grows vigorously on citrate. A competent microbiologist, perhaps requiring the assistance of a competent molecular geneticist, would readily confirm the following properties reported in our paper: (i) The ancestral strain does not grow in DM0 (zero glucose, but containing citrate), the recipe for which can be found on my web site, except leaving the glucose out of the standard recipe as stated in our paper. (ii) The evolved citrate-using strain, by contrast, grows well in that exact same medium. (iii) To confirm that the evolved strain is not some contaminating species but is, in fact, derived from the ancestral strain in our study, one could check a number of traits and genes that identify the ancestor as E. coli, and the evolved strains as a descendant thereof, as reported in our paper. (iv) One could also sequence the pykF and nadR genes in the ancestor and evolved citrate-using strains. One would find that the evolved bacteria have mutations in each of these genes. These mutations precisely match those that we reported in our previous work, and they identify the evolved citrate-using mutants as having evolved in the population designated Ara-3 of the long-term evolution experiment, as opposed to any of the other 11 populations in that experiment. And one could go on and on from there to confirm the findings in our paper, and perhaps obtain additional data of the sort that we are currently pursuing.

Before I could send anyone any bacterial strains, in order to comply with good scientific practices I would require evidence of the requesting scientist's credentials including: (i) affiliation with an appropriate unit in some university or research center with appropriate facilities for storing (-80ÂșC freezer), handling (incubators, etc.), and disposing of bacteria (autoclave); and (ii) some evidence, such as peer-reviewed publications, that indicate that the receiving scientist knows how to work with bacteria, so that I and my university can be sure we are sending biological materials to someone that knows how to handle them. By the way, our strains are not derived from one of the pathogenic varieties of E. coli that are a frequent cause of food-borne illnesses. However, even non-pathogenic strains may cause problems for those who are immune-compromised or otherwise more vulnerable to infection. Also, my university requires that a Material Transfer Agreement be executed before we can ship any strains. That agreement would not constrain a receiving scientist from publishing his or her results. However, if an incompetent or fraudulent hack (note that I make no reference to any person, as this is strictly a hypothetical scenario, one that I doubt would occur) were to make false or misleading claims about our strains, then I'm confident that some highly qualified scientists would join the fray, examine the strains, and sort out who was right and who was wrong. That's the way science works.

I would also generally ask what the requesting scientist intends to do with our strains. Why? It helps me to gauge the requester's expertise. I might be able to point out useful references, for example. Moreover, as I've said, we are continuing our work with these strains, on multiple fronts, as explained in considerable detail in the Discussion section of our paper. I would not be happy to see our work "scooped" by another team - especially for the sake of the outstanding students and postdocs in my group who are hard at work on these fronts. However, that request to allow us to proceed, without risk of being scooped on work in which we have made a substantial investment of time and effort, would be just that: a request. In other words, we would respect PNAS policy to share those strains with any competent scientist who complied with my university's requirements for the MTA and any other relevant legal restrictions. If any such request requires substantial time or resources (we have thousands of samples from this and many other experiments), then of course I would expect the recipient to bear those costs.

So there you have it. I know that I've been a bit less polite in this response than in my previous one, but I'm still behaving far more politely than you deserve given your rude, willfully ignorant, and slanderous behavior. And I've spent far more time responding than you deserve. However, as I said at the outset, I take education seriously, and I know some of your acolytes still have the ability and desire to think, as do many others who will read this exchange.

Sincerely,
Richard Lenski

P.S. Did you know that your own bowels harbor something like a billion (1,000,000,000) E. coli at this very moment? So remember to wash your hands after going to the toilet, as I hope your mother taught you. Simple calculations imply that there are something like 10^20 = 100,000,000,000,000,000,000 E. coli alive on our planet at any moment. Even if they divide just once per day, and given a typical mutation rate of 10^-9 or 10^-10 per base-pair per generation, then pretty much every possible double mutation would occur every day or so. That's a lot of opportunity for evolution.

P.P.S. I hope that some readers might get a chuckle out of this story. The same Sunday (15 June 2008) that you and some of your acolytes were posting and promoting scurrilous attacks on me and our research (wasn't that a bit disrespectful of the Sabbath?), I was in a church attending a wedding. And do you know what Old Testament lesson was read? It was Genesis 1:27-28, in which God created Man and Woman. It's a very simple and lovely story, and I did not ask any questions, storm out, or demand the evidence that it happened as written at a time when science did not yet exist. I was there in the realm of spirituality and mutual respect, not confusing a house of religion for a science class or laboratory. And it was a beautiful wedding, too.

P.P.P.S. You may be unable to understand, or unwilling to accept, that evolution occurs. And yet, life evolves! [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_pur_si_muove] From the content on your website, it is clear that you, like many others, view God as the Creator of the Universe. I respect that view. I find it baffling, however, that someone can worship God as the all-mighty Creator while, at the same time, denying even the possibility (not to mention the overwhelming evidence) that God's Creation involved evolution. It is as though a person thinks that God must have the same limitations when it comes to creation as a person who is unable to understand, or even attempt to understand, the world in which we live. Isn't that view insulting to God?

P.P.P.P.S. I noticed that you say that one of your favorite articles on your website is the one on "Deceit." That article begins as follows: "Deceit is the deliberate distortion or denial of the truth with an intent to trick or fool another. Christianity and Judaism teach that deceit is wrong. For example, the Old Testament says, 'Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.'" You really should think more carefully about what that commandment means before you go around bearing false witness against others.

Comments

#1

Posted by: Some random guy | June 24, 2008 11:29 AM

...That was awesome...

#2

Posted by: BaldySlaphead | June 24, 2008 11:33 AM

I'm British, but I understand the expression is 'Home Run'.

#3

Posted by: asad | June 24, 2008 11:34 AM

As the kids these days say:
PWN3D.

#4

Posted by: jackalopemonger | June 24, 2008 11:35 AM

Well, that was thorough.

#5

Posted by: True Bob | June 24, 2008 11:36 AM

A clarity slap upside the head. Nice.

#6

Posted by: Tom | June 24, 2008 11:36 AM

In a culture with a great many bogus "heroes," Lenski should be a real hero to every thinking person.

And Schlafly should just shut the fuck up.

#7

Posted by: Larry | June 24, 2008 11:36 AM

Boo-yah!

I am in absolute awe of Dr. Lenski response. How he can write so clearly and effectively when he must have been simply vibrating is simply amazing. I can't recall ever reading such a devastating smack-down. It should be fascinating to Schlafly's answer.

#8

Posted by: oriole | June 24, 2008 11:38 AM

If Schlafly has a grain of sense and another grain of decency, he will humbly apologize for his idiotic letters, send his poor suffering home-schooled "students" to a real school, and then skulk off to some cave somewhere, never to be heard from again.

But of course, he has neither sense nor decency; he is Andy Schlafly.

If nothing else, Lenski's brilliant reply made my day, and made the day of a lot of other defenders of science and opponents of charlatans, I reckon.

#9

Posted by: Draconiz | June 24, 2008 11:39 AM

Superb take down!

#10

Posted by: Raynfala | June 24, 2008 11:39 AM

Just gotta say it:

"Science: fuck, yeah!"

And just to add some more pertinent content:

I really appreciate Lenski's PPPS. He sums up, quite nicely, why Intelligent Design and/or Creationism are really an affront to those who believe in God. To look at evolution, such a subtle and sublime process, and then discard it in favor of the notion that an all-powerful being had to "stack the deck" instead... well, so much for preserving the notion of your God's integrity, huh?

#11

Posted by: lordbaltimore | June 24, 2008 11:39 AM

If Schlafly has a grain of sense and another grain of decency, he will humbly apologize for his idiotic letters, send his poor suffering home-schooled "students" to a real school, and then skulk off to some cave somewhere, never to be heard from again.

But of course, he has neither sense nor decency; he is Andy Schlafly.

If nothing else, Lenski's brilliant reply made my day, and made the day of a lot of other defenders of science and opponents of charlatans, I reckon.

#12

Posted by: Spook | June 24, 2008 11:40 AM

I've rarely seen someone so utterly dismembered... and so politely at that. I do hope his efforts aren't in vain; conserapaedia trolls are amazingly thick-headed. When did they evolve skulls like that anyhow?

#13

Posted by: James F | June 24, 2008 11:40 AM

Magnificent.

#14

Posted by: hyperdeath | June 24, 2008 11:42 AM

I deeply resent the implication that Conservapedia is useless. It provides a great service to the editors of Wikipedia by drawing away the article-wrecking crackpots and ideologues.

#15

Posted by: co | June 24, 2008 11:42 AM

Beautiful.

#16

Posted by: Unsympathetic reader | June 24, 2008 11:44 AM

What was the link in Lenski's letter that got censored?

Note also that in the discussion at the Con-wiki Behe's name gets mentioned as one who could review the work -- Apparently, they don't know that Behe already weighed in and makes no mention of 'fraud', 'deceit', or even poor experimmental procedure. I don't think he questions the work itself.

#17

Posted by: Damitall | June 24, 2008 11:45 AM

An exemplary piece, demonstrating the proper way to handle the likes of Schlafly.


AAlthough why Lenski should think it impolite is rather mystifying - it's far, far more polite than Schlafly deserves, and probably all the more effective for that, inasmuch as anything is likely to have an effect on such boneheadedness.

#18

Posted by: Robert Estrada | June 24, 2008 11:46 AM

I wish I had as much class as Dr. Lenski. I think his response wins the debate on that point alone.
Kudos,
Robert Estrada

#19

Posted by: Julian | June 24, 2008 11:46 AM

A superb response. I particularly like his comment on evolution and god; as a young child, before I was sure enough of my reasoning to abandon completely the idea of deities, I used to make the same point. Why must believers continually limit what they claim most fanatically to be an omnipotent being? Is there not more love in taking a few billion years to do it right, than to just throw some sand together? I'm not one for religion, but at least I could respect such a view.

#20

Posted by: CalGeorge | June 24, 2008 11:47 AM

Richard Lenski is my new hero.

Chewed up and spit out!

#21

Posted by: SC | June 24, 2008 11:49 AM

That is fantastic.

lenski (vb.): to put someone in his place and expose him as an ignoramous in an extremely rational, polite, and professorial manner, while providing an educational service to the public

#22

Posted by: Jim Lemire | June 24, 2008 11:50 AM

The comment by "Dr. Paley" really sums up the reason why creationists cannot be talked with rationally:

But how are we to know if these traits weren't 'potentiated' by the Creator when He designed the bacteria thousands of years ago, such that they would eventually reveal themselves when the time was right?

It doesn't matter what scientific evidence we give them if in their mind the root cause of all is Todd.

#23

Posted by: DaveH | June 24, 2008 11:51 AM

Back of the net!!

#24

Posted by: Glen Davidson | June 24, 2008 11:52 AM

Lenski's arrogant and zealous, which is what prompted Schlafly's attack.

You know, because Lenski actually sticks with the facts of this matter. How arrogant is that? While Schlafly meekly questions science that he hasn't read in depth, and doesn't understand.

Anyone can see that. OK, well, Slack can see that.

Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7

#25

Posted by: Badjuggler | June 24, 2008 11:53 AM

A classic example of the Scientific Bitch Slap. Well done!

#26

Posted by: Screechy Monkey | June 24, 2008 11:54 AM

How exactly do the Conservapaedia folks propose to "apply CSI techniques and determine if these 'potentiated genotypes' originated through blind chance or intelligence"?

#27

Posted by: Moses | June 24, 2008 11:54 AM

Excellent letter.

#28

Posted by: Lord Zero | June 24, 2008 11:55 AM

Its was even better than the first reply, i
enjoyed every single word.
Its incredible, he was pissed off, but managed
to still reply that politely !!

#29

Posted by: Longtime Lurker | June 24, 2008 11:56 AM

"This was a triumph, I'm making a note here: 'Huge Success'. It's hard to overstate my satisfaction."

Lenski was pure class. Unfortunately, like the dismembered Black Knight, Schlafly is not going to concede defeat, when he really should just quietly retire from public life, never to be heard from again.

#30

Posted by: Capital Dan | June 24, 2008 11:56 AM

Beautiful. I can almost picture red-assed Andy Schlafly, fresh from that spanking, reading that with his jaw gaping and tears of confusion streaming down his face.

The many postscripts really are the icing on the cake.

#31

Posted by: Seamyst | June 24, 2008 11:56 AM

I bow down in awe of greatness.

#32

Posted by: Unsympethetic reader | June 24, 2008 11:57 AM

I love this exchange. What else is in the woodwork?

"Really? He said he would put the data on his website, and I think Behe meets Lenski's three qualifications for a scientist to whom he would release the bacteria. Drochld 10:55, 24 June 2008 (EDT)

Behe? Are you serious? He's supposed to be a Creation Scientist? The guy believes in the big bang, an earth billions of years old, and evolution. He does not believe in a young Earth, Adam and Eve, or the true word of the Bible. He's an evolutionist who happens to say "oh yeah, God guided evolution." As if there was anything on the Earth not guided by God! Just because he's one of the few scientists who isn't an atheist he's supposed to be one of us? No thanks. I'd rather go with someone who didn't drink the Old Earth Kool-aid. TonyT 11:41, 24 June 2008 (EDT)

#33

Posted by: Muffin | June 24, 2008 11:57 AM

Check and mate. Well played indeed, Prof. Lenski - summa cum laude. :)

#34

Posted by: Moses | June 24, 2008 11:58 AM

BTW, Gordy Slack should look at this example of the science/religion dynamic and draw conclusions. Proper conclusions. Which would be different from his current conclusions in which the EVIL DARWINISTS are routinely attacking the faithful over their beliefs.

This is, in a nutshell, illustrates the entire dynamic. The ignorant religion-bots attack some scientists who's all "Ow, wow, this cool, let me share it with the world" because they want to own the freakin' universe without challenge.

#35

Posted by: Eric Jones | June 24, 2008 11:58 AM

That was PWNAGE with extra awesome sauce.

#36

Posted by: Steve P | June 24, 2008 11:59 AM

that was great, complete and total PWNAGE

#37

Posted by: garth | June 24, 2008 12:01 PM

Dr. Lenski gives that fellow a lot more time than he's worth. I admire his attempts to drop some learnin' on his acolytes tho. Great word..."acolyte". I will use that in conversation today.

#38

Posted by: Jon D | June 24, 2008 12:01 PM

That response showed an incredible amount of restraint and patience..
Can tell the man is a real Educator :)

#39

Posted by: jkessler | June 24, 2008 12:03 PM

HAHA, PWNED!!!!!11!1!!ONE!!!!!SHIFT-ELEVENTYONE!!!

#40

Posted by: Dahan | June 24, 2008 12:05 PM

To have that directed at one's self... just painful. Another reason to be happy I'm not Schlafly.

#41

Posted by: Ryan F Stello | June 24, 2008 12:06 PM

It's great that the "Dr. Paley" referenced int the letter, one of Conservapedia's 'stewards' likens researching of biological strains to 'CSI techniques'.

Them's good scientific principles that you pick up from the teevee.

#42

Posted by: MissPrism | June 24, 2008 12:06 PM

Brilliant. Especially the sarcastic bit about unicorns.

(And why the hopping fuck would the Creator design bacteria with the intention that they reveal themselves capable of evolving a handy biochemical trick thousands of years later in Richard Lenski's incubator? Please tell me "Dr Paley" is a sane person having a laugh on Schlafly's forum.)

#43

Posted by: Glen Davidson | June 24, 2008 12:08 PM

Btw, how the fuck does Schlafly propose to discover whether or not E. coli were "potentiated" by the Creator to transport citrate? Are they going to claim that just because it was possible for the necessary mutations to occur, that it was thereby "potentiated" for that purpose?

I have the feeling that will be their response, eventually. Since they have no criteria for either "design" or "potentiation", knowing as they do that they can never demonstrate planning, rationality, or purpose in organisms, the mere fact that it could happen will no doubt be called "potentiation".

Potential implies "potentiation", no doubt, just as function ("design" to the dishonest) implies a designer.

But the fact is that we rarely even talk about "potentiating" complex machinery for anything. It doesn't make sense, for although a computer chip may have any number of potentials, it isn't "potentiated" just because it might be adapted to act in some manner for which it was not designed.

Well, there's not much point in playing these word games with the IDiots. I'm glad that Lenski was quite polite in his first response, and properly disparaging of Schlafly's evident incompetence and lack of open-mindedness in the second. They'll claim "potentiation" by the Creator, of course. It simply won't mean anything, any more than "designer" and "creator" does to these nihilistic anti-science bigots.

Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7

#44

Posted by: Martin | June 24, 2008 12:08 PM

Take a look at the talk page. It's... unbelievable.

Someone asked what was in the part that was apparently removed by the spam filter:

"
It hardly seems fair to censor part of Professor Lenski's full and comprehensive reply. It also seems to be a little heavy-handed to say that people who ask questions about such censorship will be "dealt with accordingly".--British_cons (talk) 09:40, 24 June 2008 (EDT)

No, the link should definitely not be revealed. Although I, naturally, don't know what the link is to, though we can assume it was a shock site, foul language, pornography, or something in that line. Since Lenski knew that his response would be posted on this family-friendly encyclopedia, he would have purposefully put the link in to aggravate readers. That tells us a lot about his attitude, and by keeping the link intact, we let him "win".

#45

Posted by: Stwriley | June 24, 2008 12:09 PM

"Sir, permit;
Naught could be finer--I'm a judge I think;
I stamped, i' faith!--to show my admiration!"
(Cyrano de Bergerac, Act I, scene iv)

#46

Posted by: Raynfala | June 24, 2008 12:10 PM

RE: #16


What was the link in Lenski's letter that got censored?

Speculation is running rampant on the talk page over at CP. Most speculate it was a link to a page on RationalWiki, which is a site that is almost entirely devoted to mocking the activities on CP.

Hardly surprising that Schlafly would "spam filter" it. And it's quite amusing to watch Schlafly and his "acolytes" try to stiffle conversation about the link, why it was removed, what it linked to, etc. etc. Heck, some are even making the accusation that it was a porn link.

Remember... "trustworthy..."

#47

Posted by: clarence | June 24, 2008 12:12 PM

I can barely read that, it's so covered with burn sauce!

It does make me a little sad, though, that Lenski is dealing with this bullcrap at all when by rights he should be enjoying that rock-star lifestyle of someone who just published an excellent paper. It's all hookers and blow for the PI, right?

#48

Posted by: Glen Davidson | June 24, 2008 12:13 PM

CSI techniques

IOW, statistical methods not based on solid evidence which are designed to claim intelligent causes where there are no intelligent (notably, rational) effects.

Find design, moron, not complexity. Complexity is the expected consequence of billions of years evolution. It is possible, but not expected, from design.

Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/2kxyc7

#49

Posted by: Carlie | June 24, 2008 12:13 PM

Wow. Schlafly just got Lenskied. (#21)

That was brilliant. I shall bask in that the rest of the day.

#50

Posted by: Architeuthis | June 24, 2008 12:14 PM

I'd be impressed if Andy Schlafly even reads the rebuttal. If the data was just "skimmed" this amazing, clear, brilliant and tolerant verbal smackdown would just be ignored.

Lenski is just pure amazing and awesome wrapped up in cool. He'd be that just for the research he did, his correspondence with Schlafly just confirms the extent of his amazingness.

#51

Posted by: David | June 24, 2008 12:14 PM

Note to Andy Schlafly:

Stay down. Just stay down.

#52

Posted by: Enzo | June 24, 2008 12:14 PM

Anybody knows what the goons at conservapedia decided to censor from Lenski reply? I am referring to: "[Ed.: citation omitted due to spam filter].

#53

Posted by: James Randi | June 24, 2008 12:15 PM

Conservapedia ...
You will never find a more wretched hive of scum
and villainy. We must be cautious.

[With apologies to George Lucas and Alec Guinness]

#54

Posted by: Jack | June 24, 2008 12:16 PM

"Now, if I was really mean, I might only share the ancestral strain, and let the scientists undertake the 20 years of our experiment. . . . But I'm a nice guy, . . . so if a competent scientist asks for them, I would even send a sample of the evolved E. coli that now grows vigorously on citrate."

LOL. Wow. If Lenski were really mean, he might only have responded with derision, but he's a nice guy. So we got a wonderful education. Thank you for sharing.

#55

Posted by: Todd | June 24, 2008 12:16 PM

It doesn't matter what scientific evidence we give them if in their mind the root cause of all is Todd.

I suppose I should offer some sort of apology now.

#56

Posted by: CG | June 24, 2008 12:17 PM

The censored link was most likely to RationalWiki, a site dedicated to cataloging the idiocy of Conservapedia.

Schlafly apparently refuses to link to their site.

#57

Posted by: Foo | June 24, 2008 12:19 PM

CREATIONIST FAIL.

#58

Posted by: Benjamin Franklin | June 24, 2008 12:19 PM

I give Dr. Lenski an A+.
.
.

#59

Posted by: Ron | June 24, 2008 12:20 PM

The edited link was indeed to RationalWiki.

#60

Posted by: UKGP | June 24, 2008 12:21 PM

In the news bit at conservapedia:

Lenski's latest response to a request for his data is revealing ... about Lenski's attitude. Take a good look at the attitude our tax dollars are paying for.

It looks like all Aschafly's got to respond with is "How dare he be rude to me". I had hoped for some kind of insane rant, but this is satifying. I think he realises he's lost but won't admit it

#61

Posted by: Brownian, OM | June 24, 2008 12:22 PM

It's all hookers and blow for the PI, right?

Sigh. And then there's me: always a second author, never the first.

#62

Posted by: James Crooks | June 24, 2008 12:22 PM

Dr. Lenski is a gentleman and a scholar. To so effectively, rationally, and patiently dismember Schfly's ignorance is impressive and this letter is brilliant rhetoric. Lenski is a sterling example of the highest class of scientist, not only an excellent researcher but a well-spoken and thoughtful individual who values educating others.

Now, I shall enjoy seeing if this exchange continues. While I do not wish to see Dr. Lenski's time wasted, his writing is certainly the sort that could sway those on the fence--those who can still be swayed.

#63

Posted by: SpotWeld | June 24, 2008 12:23 PM

Science is collaborative... and that is what Andy Schafly can't understand.

He seems to view the presentation of "raw data" as part of a legal or argumentative process. Since he has failed to present either the capability or the interest in reproducing or furthering the concepts presented in the paper he has precluded himself from receiving access to the raw materials of this experiment, the archive of bacterial lineage.

In a sense, since he has done nothing but communicate in a combative and uselessly argumentative manner he has proven himself unable to interact in a manner that would support progress. He has failed the "90/10 rule" of scientific discourse.

I'd like to submit that is irony... sweet sweet irony.

#64

Posted by: Iain Walker | June 24, 2008 12:23 PM

Comment #44:

Although I, naturally, don't know what the link is to, though we can assume it was a shock site, foul language, pornography, or something in that line. Since Lenski knew that his response would be posted on this family-friendly encyclopedia, he would have purposefully put the link in to aggravate readers. That tells us a lot about his attitude, and by keeping the link intact, we let him "win".

Er, this is a Poe, right?

#65

Posted by: afterthought | June 24, 2008 12:25 PM

... Several of your acolytes have pointed this out to you, and that your motives are unclear or questionable at best, but you and your cronies dismissed their concerns as rants and even expelled some of them from posting on your website.
Link was to here if I have it sorted out correctly:
http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/Conservapedia#Banning_Users

[Ed.: citation omitted due to spam filter] Several also pointed out that I had very quickly and straightforwardly responded that the methods and data supporting the evolution of the citrate-utilization capacity are already provided in our paper.
#66

Posted by: SpotWeld | June 24, 2008 12:25 PM

Is there any sort of internett away that we can nominate Lenski for? That was such a glorious and total smackdown.

#67

Posted by: Orac | June 24, 2008 12:26 PM

I can almost picture red-assed Andy Schlafly, fresh from that spanking, reading that with his jaw gaping and tears of confusion streaming down his face.

I can't, because Andy Schlafly suffers from the arrogance of ignorance. He simply has no clue how clueless he is about science and is utterly shameless. I predict he'll put together some BS response whining about persecution and "ad hominem" attacks, while blustering and threatening FOI requests because Lensky's work was at least partially NIH-funded.

#68

Posted by: Raynfala | June 24, 2008 12:26 PM

Note to Andy Schlafly:

Stay down. Just stay down.

And stop posting.

#69

Posted by: Ouchimoo | June 24, 2008 12:28 PM

Science, It works bitches!

I am amazed that they would submit Lenski's reply on conserveapedia. It doesn't seem like conserveapedia's tactics to post on their own website something that pwns them. Ah who am I kidding, with their warped little idealizations they NEVER LOOSE! Makes me laugh every time I see a creationist website talk about how people supporting evo always loose in a debate. Stupid funny.

#70

Posted by: Orac | June 24, 2008 12:29 PM

Oops, that's "Lenski's" work.

#71

Posted by: hje | June 24, 2008 12:29 PM

Great rebuttal to utter nonsense. But I think it's utterly wasted on a demagogue like Schlafly who is not at all interested in what we commonly think of as truth. But I'm sure his harassment of Lenski gives him street cred with his cronies for "sticking it to the scientific establishment." He's probably angling for a part in Expelled 2: Revenge of the IDiots.

Don't be surprised if Schlafly continues to push this and gets some red state politico to help him with his witch hunt (as in the Sternberg case).

#72

Posted by: Brownian, OM | June 24, 2008 12:29 PM

Lenski's latest response to a request for his data is revealing ... about Lenski's attitude. Take a good look at the attitude our tax dollars are paying for.

What an asshole. Apparently Schlafly's the type who, upon being pulled over for speeding, yells at the cop that he pays his salary.

Way to take douchebag to the next level, Andy.

#73

Posted by: NM | June 24, 2008 12:29 PM

[Ed.: citation omitted due to spam filter]

So what is this? They have a funny discussion on their talk page about not mentioning, and even banning people for merely asking about what it is. They just call the site linked to "RW." What is it?

#74

Posted by: sdg | June 24, 2008 12:32 PM

I wish I had as much class as Dr. Lenski. I think his response wins the debate on that point alone.

not trying to pick a fight but this doesn't make sense. he wins because he's right. the class is just a bonus. on the subject of class, i find it interesting that everyone is posting laudatory remarks for Dr. Lenski's class when i've noticed other comment threads in which people are quick to reply "they don't deserve it!" when posters suggest similar approaches. certainly they do not deserve it but it may be more effective.

#75

Posted by: Dennis N | June 24, 2008 12:36 PM

Breathtaking response... Lenski sounds like a professor talking to an arrogant student who is about to fail his class, putting Schafly in his place, but saying maybe there's a chance he can pass if he quits being so egotistical and close-minded.

#76

Posted by: Emmet Caulfield | June 24, 2008 12:36 PM

Well done, Lenski!

*standing ovation*


#77

Posted by: SC | June 24, 2008 12:38 PM

I can see why they wouldn't want to include the link to the RationalWiki page:

...One theory which has emerged is that Conservapedia is not run by the Religious Right at all; that instead is an extreme parody of fringe loonbags, such as the Westboro Baptist Church, since it is hard to imagine such a large group of people being so loopdy loopder.
#78

Posted by: Martin | June 24, 2008 12:40 PM

Oh, and anyone looking for a laugh (and quite possibly a slightly more cynical look on humanity) go to www.rationalwiki.com and find the "Best of Conservapedia" part.

#79

Posted by: Alex | June 24, 2008 12:41 PM

Ska-Doosh!!

#80

Posted by: chris y | June 24, 2008 12:42 PM

The name of "Dr Paley" makes me suspect a provocateur at work (and good luck to him). What would he think if he found a watch while crossing a heath, I wonder?

#81

Posted by: Mrs Tilton | June 24, 2008 12:42 PM

Schlafly's acolyte "Dr Richard Paley"? Would that by any chance be this Dr Paley?

Poe's Law and all that, but the idea of "stewardship" over bacteria does sound suspiciously, emm, objective. I suspect Schlafly is getting pwn3d by more than just Dr Lenski...