Posted by
The Hunter on Monday, February 11, 2008 9:14:32 AM
It doesn't take data to conclude that evolution is a sham.
All you need to know is basic, say, third grade education to realize that evolution contradicts reality.
Let's look at evolution. Evolution is the ongoing process through which organisms change over time. Monkeys into men, fish into whales, velociraptors into birds. The premise for all life today is that it evolved from simpler life forms.
But why do we have the vast gaps between the evolution that supposedly occurred? Evolution should be an ongoing, continuing process, but it appears to have stopped. We have fish. We have birds. We have apes and we have men.
Exactly why is it that every single transitional form between man and ape is dead? They shouldn't be. Supposedly, when an organism spontaneously mutates a beneficial quality, it becomes better able to compete, yada yada, and it dominates the species. Eventually all the organisms in the species have the mutation, assuming its hereditary. So why do we even have apes? Why didn't the "next step" above apes dominate the apes until all the apes became holders of the mutation?
What we have is a number of gaps that shouldn't be there. Fish growing legs? Evolution should be constantly repeating itself. Why aren't there fish growing legs today? Think about it. Over a period of millions of years, supposedly, we find ourselves at a point in evolution, where every creature fits neatly into categories?
We should see evolution demonstrated as true in our daily lives, that is, if it is true. We should see the developing wings on reptiles, legs on fish, fur on amphibeans. Like the fossil record should be the greatest evidence for evolution, and instead is the greatest evidence against it, our own observations should steadfastly prove evolution, and instead steadfastly deny its very possibility.
The point stands. If evolution happens, it should be an ongoing process, observable. We may not live long enough to detect changes while we are alive, but it should be obvious that the changes are in motion. And they are, most definitely, not.