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Someone knocked on our apartment door around 7:30 tonight, just as Noda and I got finished with dinner. It was four people who I recognized as living in our building. Three of them were between 7 and 11 years old, and the other was their mother. The older of the two boys was the spokesperson; after asking if I was good at understanding English (which made me smile inside -- I like our very diverse building with its immigrants from many nations) he offered a DVD ("free!") about the history of the Earth, with a lecture by Dr. Hovind on it. I asked if I should give it back to them after I had finished watching (suspecting what it might be about), and he was a bit thrown, but said no, I should pass it on to someone else. I took it and said thanks, and they went off to the next door

Noda and I skimmed through a lot of it. Yes, it's a creationist DVD, a lecture by someone who taught school science for 15 years until about 1990 and has since become a lecturer on creationism, dispelling myths about evolution. He's a pretty good public speaker, sometimes funny and sometimes friendly, but with a bit too much snake oil to him. He's a Young Earth Creationist who states that every word in the "Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth" is literally true, and has arguments for why evolution, the big bang, the Old Earth, and lots of other things, are not just untrue, but unscientific.

We didn't watch the entire thing, but a fair amount, and now I ask you for help:
How should we respond? I could of course ignore the incident and just use it as an anecdote, but they told me which apartment they're in, meaning I can go visit them, and I don't want them to hear Dr. Hovind's arguments without hearing the other side. But being confrontational about it is not the way.... maybe I can knock on their door, thank them, and ask to talk about my impressions of it? Maybe I could find some DVD or reading material to leave for them (or for other people in the building, since I'm sure they've all been offered copies of this DVD). Their visit to our door was out of the blue, but that doesn't mean I should just ignore the opportunity it may have given me. Any advice?

Date: 2006-08-01 05:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zorblak.livejournal.com
I, of course, think you should call Child Services and have those children taken away from the parent, but that might be just a bit extreme. More realistically, I don't see any reason not to engage in dialogue with them. The worst that can happen is that you don't get through to them, but you won't get through to them if you don't even try, and you might end up saving a child.

Hmm...

Date: 2006-08-11 01:11 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
So far, the vast majority appears to find that almost any response would be confrontational. But no one seems to have considered what it means that the family did this in the first place. Aren't THEY being confrontational? (Not that I am suggesting a confrontation should be engaged in), but it looks a little different to me when you consider who was the active party. It almost seems like a sly dump job... I also note that many of the arguments applied to what Jim could do actually apply to what the family did in fact do...

Pseudo-philosophically,
Ellen

PS: Pardon my incoherence, I've had about 8 hours of sleep to cover the last two days. Yes, it's my fault; and yes, it was worth it, and I'm going to bed soon (after which I hope to be at least marginally less incoherent)

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