"Physicist Richard Feynman once said, during an introductory quantum physics lecture to a non-specialist audience, 'I'm going to tell you the theory and you'll think it's crazy; many of you won't want to believe it. But it doesn't matter if you like it or not, because it's the way it is. Nature doesn't care if you don't like the way she does things; they happen that way whether you like them or not.' ID proponents and other Creationists 'don’t like' what the evidence says, and have settled upon a course of obfuscation, word tricks, and manipulation of data in order to discredit evolutionary theory."
That's from "Evolution & Creationism: Terminology in Conflict" by Richard Joltes at CSICOP's website. (And I think David Morrison's response is largely wrong-headed--it is possible for people to understand two different--even contradictory--meanings for the same word . . . .)