Oops.

Young earth creationist Ken Ham has spent years spinning tales. He tells people all the answers to all the world’s questions can be found in the Christian bible, the earth is just six thousand years old, and Noah saved mankind after building an ark and collecting two of every animal, placing them in the boat, and withstanding the great 40 days and 40 nights flood God sent.

Along the way, Ham apparently also found the answers to his tax law questions in the good book.Â

He recently “sold” the land his “life-sized” Noah’s Ark replica and museum sits on to himself, or more specifically, to a non-profit he created, for $10. By doing so, he is trying to turn his for-profit Ark Encounter museum into a non-profit ministry, so he can avoid paying 50 cents in taxes on every ticket sold.

Apparently, the Bible’s tax law information is out of date.

“Not satisfied enough with winning a court battle worth $18 million in tax rebates after convincing a judge that his for-profit business, which is actively using religion as a form of employment discrimination, he has now sold the land the theme park sits on, worth $48 million, to his own non-profit entity, Crosswater Canyon, for $10. You read that right, ten dollars,” the Huffington Post’s Dan Arel reports.Â

That “religion as a form of employment discrimination” is very accurate. Ham requires all employees to sign a pledge stating they agree with all of his religious beliefs. It specifies that marriage os only between one man and one woman. Somehow he managed to convince Kentucky officials that by not granting his tax break they were discriminating against his for-profit business that discriminates against others on the basis of religious beliefs.

Ham “once again found a new way to swindle the good people of Kentucky out of their money,”Â Arel says.