Expelled Review
The Dissent of Men and the Rise of Their Oppressors
by Mark Looy, CCO, AiG–U.S.
March 17, 2008
Several weeks ago, the Answers in Genesis (AiG) staff was treated to a
viewing of the director’s cut of the already-controversial film Expelled:
No Intelligence Allowed.1 Expected to release April 18, Expelled is
a hard-hitting, yet often humorous, documentary that chronicles how
Darwin-dissenters have been ruthlessly expelled, or otherwise persecuted, in
their professions. It is hosted by the very entertaining civil rights
activist/economist/presidential speechwriter/cultural icon (actor and
quiz-show host), Ben Stein, whom filmmakers follow as he goes on a personal
quest to examine the origins question.
Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed has become controversial not only
because it exposes those academicians who persecute people who have a belief
in the appearance of “design” in nature, but also because the film is already
generating a negative reaction (including from some of the film’s subjects who
come off in a highly unflattering way, including famed atheist-scientist
Richard Dawkins).
The brilliant host of Expelled, Ben Stein,
makes a point during his meeting with AiG-U.S. President Ken Ham just before a
preview showing of his film. This superb documentary comes to theaters
nationwide on April 18.
As a demonstration of how the evolution police can mete out injustice, the
film’s first “persecutee” is an evolutionist himself: Richard Sternberg. He
does not doubt evolution, yet Sternberg’s very act of allowing a peer-reviewed
research paper that presented evidence for intelligent design to be published
in a science journal (Proceedings of the Biological Society of
Washington) led to his forced resignation and a career “ruined.”
Sternberg, with two PhDs, was the target of the anti-creationist group
National Center for Science Education and the Smithsonian Institution (where
Sternberg was a researcher), as these groups orchestrated an effort to have
him expelled from his position.
In another segment, Michael Shermer, head of the Skeptics Society,
described Intelligent Design (ID) as mostly nonsense and would not come to the
defense of fellow-evolutionist Sternberg. Shermer bizarrely contends that
Sternberg must have done something wrong to have been forced out (even though
Shermer admits on camera that he did not know what that might have been).
An hour and thirty minutes later, we watch atheist Dawkins sniff that
evolution is a “fact” and “securely” so, and thus dissenters are either not
sane or are stupid—or (somewhat more charitably) ignorant. In keeping with the
film’s ongoing Cold War metaphors of freedom under attack, Dawkins, earlier in
the film, describes the origins debate as a “skirmish” and a “war.”
The arch anti-creationist William Provine is seen as incorrectly stating
that it was illegal to teach evolution in Tennessee’s schools during the time
of the 1925 Scopes trial. Actually, the state allowed an instructor to teach
evolution, unless an instructor said that humans evolved from an ape-like
creature. Then there is the stubborn and impatient Michael Ruse, who insists
on presenting a non-answer to the question of how the first living cell could
have originated; he repeatedly states that it occurred on the “backs of
crystals.”
At film’s end, Dawkins makes a remarkable concession—probably jaw-dropping
for those who have read his books or watched his media interviews. When
pressed by Stein, Dawkins allows for the possibility that life’s apparent
design could have been produced by intelligent beings elsewhere in the
universe—who themselves had evolved and then brought life here!
Between Sternberg and Dawkins, the film is punctuated by examples of
shameful mistreatment (e.g., the highly qualified Guillermo Gonzalez, denied
tenure at Iowa State University), expulsion (e.g., Caroline Crocker from
George Mason University), and silliness (e.g., protestors outside AiG’s
Creation Museum on opening day last May).
Other ID-sympathetic academics give accounts of their persecution in
silhouette to maintain their anonymity; these segments bring back memories of
the dissenting authors of Soviet Russia who wrote under pen names to avoid
being expelled (usually to a frozen Siberia).
In the second half of the film, Expelled settles into a very serious
tone, especially in those scenes when Stein visits World War II death camps
and explores the connection between the Nazi worldview and Darwinian thinking.
Stein is brilliant in these scenes as he goes with the flow of the story as it
unfolds in front of him and as he carefully listens to the answers he
receives—and then follows up with penetrating questions. He is obviously not
working from a tight script.
Yet there are some bright lights and moments of sanity in this penetrating
documentary. John Lennox of Oxford correctly points out that all scientists
have biases and worldviews that they bring to their research—and then to the
conclusions they draw from evidence. Also, David Berlinski, a mathematician
and philosopher, sits down with Stein and eloquently brings up the problems
with evolution (comparing it to a “room full of smoke”).
Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, despite its subtitle, is not an
intelligent design movement promo, per se.2 Also, some IDers, such as Bruce Chapman of the
Discovery Institute, admit on film that ID is not a Christian movement and
that people of various faiths are involved. Another IDer, Paul Nelson, though
a friend of biblical, young-earth creationists, regrettably offers a wrong
definition of creationism. He declares that it is a movement of taking the
Bible and fitting it into science. To the contrary, creationists do not “fit”
the Scriptures into science. If they did, creationists would be engaged in
taking man’s fallible interpretations of science and somehow trying to conform
them to the Bible. God’s Word is a book of real history. Using this as our
starting point, we can build a correct way of thinking and truly understand
the universe. The Bible explains all that is in the universe.3
Although not an ID film, Expelled does present a scientific defense
of the idea of intelligent design (one that AiG would largely accept). The
incredible complexity seen in a molecule like DNA is shown on the screen
(though viewers uninterested in science may have their eyes glaze over during
this animated section). Expelled asks the question often posed by
creation scientists: where does the new genetic information come from as a
mechanism to drive molecules-to-man evolution? Natural selection cannot
explain the rise of new genetic information.

Ken Ham, president of AiG and the Creation Museum, had the following things
to say about the Expelled documentary:
“I urge everyone not to miss Expelled. I found it riveting,
eye-opening, even astonishing. Ben Stein does a masterful job of exposing the
ruthlessness of evolutionists who will go after anyone who challenges or
merely questions Darwinian orthodoxy. I was on the edge of my seat—entertained
yet instructed.”
“Challenge school board members in your community to watch this
well-produced documentary. Even pay for their tickets, but get them there!”
“Congratulations to the producers for the courage to create a much-needed
perspective on the erosion of freedoms in America.”
Overall, the film is more about exposing the fear of evolutionists in
allowing free speech in scientific inquiry (and their accompanying tyrannical
behavior) than it is an anti-evolution piece. Stein discovers an elitist
scientific establishment that has exchanged science’s supposed quest for
open-minded inquiry for harsh dogmatism. Freedom, “the essence of America”
says Stein (a former civil rights lawyer), is easily taken away at
universities, with qualified scientists expelled for not embracing
evolution.
In one of the many ironic and hypocritical moments seen in the film, a
Baptist university, Baylor University in Texas, is documented as persecuting
one of its professors because he questioned evolution. The façade of a Baylor
building then comes on the screen, and we see an inscription of a verse from
Colossians 1. It declares that “in
God, all things were created by Him.”
So, how will hard-core evolutionists attack this documentary? It is likely
they will attack it on at least two major fronts by:4
- objecting to how the film equates the behavior of the totalitarian
regimes of Nazi Germany and Communist Russia to the actions of
Darwin-defenders who squash freedom
- attacking the film’s claim that there is a link between evolution and
racism
Regarding the latter, we wish to point out that from his own words, Charles
Darwin can be shown to be a racist (even though he advocated abolition). On
the last page of his The Descent of Man, Darwin said he would rather be
descended from a monkey than from a “savage.” Furthermore, he called those
with dark skin “savage,” “low,” and “degraded.” Also, the subtitle of Darwin’s
main work On the Origin of the Species happens to be: “The Preservation
of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life” [emphasis added]. This is
not at all surprising, for, as AiG president Ken Ham points out in the new
book Darwin’s
Plantation, Darwinian evolution claims that humans descended from
ape-like ancestors, and this logically implies that certain “races” are closer
to the apes than others.5
Conclusion
In summarizing Expelled’s ultimate goal, Stein declares that he
wants to see a world where “scientists are supposed to be allowed to follow
the evidence wherever it may lead, no matter what the implications are.
Freedom of inquiry has been greatly compromised, and this is not only
anti-American, it’s anti-science. It’s anti-the whole concept of
learning.”6
AiG has not been sanguine about elements of the intelligent design movement
and some of its well-intentioned activists. But having watched the movie twice
now, we note that the film is not about trying to push ID on society, much
less argue that ID should be mandated in schools (which AiG would not
support).7 Also, the film makes it clear that the ID
movement is not a Christian one (although many evangelicals are part of it).
More than anything, the documentary seeks to expose the ruthlessness of
radical atheists and evolutionists and their attempt to erode freedom in order
to protect their own worldview. In its goal, Expelled has marvelously
succeeded.
For information on how to get "Expelled" to a theater near you, just click the link below for the original article.
Original article: Answers In Genesis
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