Great article on the Guardian UK's website(no American publication is willing to go this route with the issue, sadly).
http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/feature/story/0,13026,1559743,00.html
I DUNNO LET'S ASK MEL GIBSON!
http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/feature/story/0,13026,1559743,00.html
Intelligent design is not an argument of the same character as these controversies. It is not a scientific argument at all, but a religious one. It might be worth discussing in a class on the history of ideas, in a philosophy class on popular logical fallacies, or in a comparative religion class on origin myths from around the world. But it no more belongs in a biology class than alchemy belongs in a chemistry class, phlogiston in a physics class or the stork theory in a sex education class. In those cases, the demand for equal time for "both theories" would be ludicrous. Similarly, in a class on 20th-century European history, who would demand equal time for the theory that the Holocaust never happened?
I DUNNO LET'S ASK MEL GIBSON!