Many American schools will recognize monsters

Since 2013 teachers in a southern US state will start teaching students that monsters really exist on earth.

Schools owned by the Christian Church in Louisiana, USA will begin bringing information about sea monsters in Loch Ness - Scotland's most famous mysterious creature - into textbooks the following year. All their textbooks will recognize the Loch Ness lake monster that exists on Earth, Scotsman reported.

'Ultrasound in a small submarine once discovered Loch Ness monster. Many people have seen it and some have photographed it. It's a giant reptile that lives in the water ' , the newspaper quoted a paragraph that will appear in the book.

Another paragraph in the book states that sailors on a Japanese whale ship saw sea monsters.

Picture 1 of Many American schools will recognize monsters
A photo of Loch Ness lake monster. (Photo: scotsman)

The purpose of recognizing Loch Ness is the rejection of the evolutionary theory of naturalist Charles Darwin and the support of the creationist theory (which the soul of God created).

After Charles Darwin published his book "Origin of Species" , his theory of evolution based on natural selection faced the opposition of some religions. These religions are concerned that the popularity of Darwinism, one of the manifestations of atheistic materialism, will reduce the faith of people to God.

With the new textbooks, students will be taught that, in order to refute the theory of evolution, they just need to prove that the ancestors of humans and dinosaurs appear on the earth together.

Critics of Church schools' ideas that the Loch Ness monster entry into textbooks is bizarre, and accuses them of promoting extreme political and religious ideas.

Bruce Wilson, a religious and political rights researcher and writer in Boston, said: 'One of those books claimed that dinosaurs were fire-breathing dragons. Such concepts are not scientific at all and make people think of medieval philosophical theory of philosophy. '

Despite this, Wilson predicts the aquatic monster recognition books will appear in at least 13 US states in the future.

'About 200,000 students will learn those books. In my opinion, the government should not provide financial support for schools that study Darwin's theory of evolution , 'he said.