Not only is it a case of a constitutional violation as tsg pointed out, it is a question of whether or not science should form the basis of how we see the world, or it should be a specific religion's dogma.
I'm not disagreeing with you there. My contention is you have to choose the hill you want to die on and this is not on the top of my list of hills.
If you don't need science to explain how species came to be, then you don't need any science at all. Biology cannot be explained without evolution. If you can substitute biology text books with the Bible, you have to substitute all other textbooks on any science subject.
We do not give equal time to religious dogma in a science class. It's that simple.
I understand that. You're preaching to the choir and you're patronizing me. Don't do it.
Don't you think you should have found that data, before you announce that this is a "relatively small problem"?
Don't you think you should find some data before you start saying that it's not a small problem? Now you're playing debate tactics here, and debates don't reach conclusions.
I just think that you need to wake up and learn a bit about how Creationists have tried to enforce their own religious views on all Americans. This is not something that is created by politicians, but by religious fundamentalists.
Try this introduction.
You think being able to balance a checkbook is more important than knowing how the Universe works? Really?
Did I say it was more important? No, of course I didn't, and you're trying to reduce my argument to absurdity by quoting my out of context. Stop it.
My point was that the educational system in this country has more serious problems than whether or not there are some paragraphs in a science textbook that talk about ID or creation science, balanced with the scientific truth of evolution, when only a relatively small number of kids in some states will even read it, let alone believe it.
You're welcome to "die on this hill" so to speak, and I think we'll win this one eventually, but my priorities are different for education. The hill I'm going to die on is making sure kids are not functionally illiterate when they graduate. Also, I'm not going to fall into the trap of demonizing the other side of this issue like some people on this board have done in the past, sounding like a bunch of fascists themselves (if you've done this, you know who you are). It's unproductive and IMO, this is just another in a long line of wedge issues to get folks to vote for certain people that they would not vote for ordinarily. That's important to me too. I'm not going to end up voting for certain people who want to keep this sort of nonsense out of our science classes when many of their other policies in other areas are harmful, IMO.
Big picture.
Anyway, I'm done defending what my priorities are for a better country when in reality, we are in agreement here, just in disagreement as to the degree of importance we place on it.