David Coppedge, B.S. Education, B.S. Physics, founded Creation-Evolution Headlines in late 2000 as a way to share science news he was encountering at NASA. It has grown into a highly-trusted source of news and commentary critical of the pro-Darwin consensus, providing analysis of breaking news of interest to creationists and evolutionists, without the Darwin spin. He has authored over 7,000 entries at CEH since its inception.

David worked as a system administrator at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory for 14 years as a member of the Cassini team. For 9 of those years at JPL, he was Team Lead System Administrator, responsible for most of the ground system computers for the historic mission to Saturn. In this role he got to know many of the world's leading planetary scientists. In addition, he led JPL tours and was a Cassini outreach speaker to civic groups and astronomy clubs.

David is a board member and science consultant for Illustra Media and an Associate with Logos Research Associates. His sharing of Illustra DVDs led to his firing from JPL in 2012. This led to a court trial, assisted by the Discovery Institute and Alliance Defending Freedom. It ended with a lone judge ruling against him without explanation.

Coppedge now devotes more time to Creation-Evolution Headlines and other creation ministries. He also writes for the Discovery Institute, a leading think tank for intelligent design, where he has written over 1,700 articles.
VIEW HEADLINES ONLY

Scientific Uncertainty Is Cosmic in Scope

Different researchers can use the same data to reach opposite conclusions. This contributes to a crisis of confidence in science.

Elites Celebrate Darwin’s Flawed Analogy

A short manuscript autographed by Darwin is being feted like holy scripture but contains poor reasoning.

Witchcraft Evolves, Says New Study

Survey tries to pin witchcraft on religiosity, but if it evolves, a Darwinist must conclude it improves the fitness of a group.

Why God Created Sleep

Enjoy your naps and bedtime rest. God is refreshing your body and brain.

Archive Classic: The Science of Thanksgiving

Should science tread into areas of virtue? When it comes to gratitude, they miss the whole point.

Electric ‘Muscle’ Found in Sensitive Plant

If 'muscle' is loosely defined as a system that powers movement, the sensitive plant qualifies as a bodybuilder.

Earth Arctic Is Not Like Enceladus

NASA commits its most common logical fallacy in a press release geared to titillate the public about astrobiology.

Lost and Found: Extinct Species Turn Up

Don't count out extinct species. In rare cases, they might be playing hide and seek.

Illustra Shares Peace and Hope

Illustra media's newest short film invites one to dwell on good things for a few minutes.

Big Science Caught Using Dirty Money

The FTX scandal has universities and journals scrambling to save face and replenish funding after a favorite well suddenly dried up.

JWST Finds Un-Big-Banged Galaxies

Astronomers were surprised to find disk galaxies older than they should be.

Another Population Bomb?

Scientists are claiming the Earth's human population hit 8 billion this month. But there are reasons to want more.

Returning to a Young Moon

On the eve of the Artemis launch, questions about the age and formation of the moon have resurfaced.

Moon Is Too Dry for Astronauts

NASA is counting on water ice in shadowed craters on the moon, but there may be none. And there are other hazards.
F. Clark Howell, "Early Man" book, Time-Life Young Readers Edition, 1968, p. 33

Footprints in the Scams of Time

Evolutionists nearly triple the age of human footprints, revealing the effrontery in their slimy dating schemes.
All Posts by Date
[archives type="yearly" cat_id=""]