I agree. But just because it is "secular" does not make it correct or accurate. I think education should embrace religious thought as a vibrant part of our culture and history.
Plus, is it really worth the trouble of suing over these stickers? I mean, they aren't espousing anything in particular, they are just pointing out the simple truth that evolution has NOT been proven 100 percent and that people need to approach ANY scientific argument with an open mind and critical thinking. If evolution really has as much going for it as many secular people think it does, then won't the kids reach the same conclusions as them? In general? I mean, it didn't take me that long to get over the notion that human life was completely disconnected from other life forms - DNA studies in particular proves that to me.
Won't the facts speak for themselves louder than any amount of stickers?
I think science class often becomes a one-sided argument in favor of atheism, which is a religion in its own right. Many science teachers I studied under took a twisted pleasure in putting a true / false question: Evolution is a fact. Which puts the student in the quandrary of having to either betray his or her religious upbringing, assuming that they have one, or getting a lesser mark than an atheist. This was not one teacher. This was a repetitive pattern in the schools I attended in three English speaking countries: Australia, Britain, and the USA. Grade and higher schools both.
CZAR