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The
Evidence for Creation By Outside Intervention
by Lloyd Pye
from
Nexus Magazine
Volume
9, Number 4
June-July
2002
Darwinists,
Creationists and Intelligent Design proponents
are
unable to explain anomalies in the emergence of domesticated plants,
animals and humans
THE ABSURDITIES OF DOGMA
In 1905, a 25-year-old
patent clerk named Albert Einstein demolished the 200-year-old
certainty that Isaac Newton knew all there was to know about
basic physics. In a technical paper only a few pages long, Einstein
sent a huge part of his current "reality" to history's
dustbin, where it found good company with thousands of other discards
large and small. In 1905, though, Newton's discard was about as large
as the bin would hold.
Now another grand old "certainty" hovers over
history's dustbin, and it seems only a matter of time before some new Einstein
writes the few (or many) pages that will bring it down and
relegate it to history. And, as was the case in 1905, every
"expert" in the world laughs heartily at any suggestion that
their certainty could be struck down. Yet if facts are any
yardstick--which should always be the case, but frequently isn't--Charles
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection is moving
towards extinction.
Please note this: not everyone who challenges evolution is
automatically a Creationist. Darwinists love to tar all opponents with
that brush because so much of Creationist dogma is absurd.
Creationists mulishly exclude themselves from serious consideration by
refusing to give up fatally flawed parts of their argument, such as
the literal interpretation of "six days of creation". Of
course, some have tried to take a more reasonable stance, but those
few can't be heard over the ranting of the many who refuse.
Recently a new group has entered the fray, much better educated than
typical Creationists. This group has devised a theory called "Intelligent
Design", which has a wealth of scientifically established
facts on its side. The ID-ers, though, give away their Creationist
roots by insisting that because life at its most basic level is so
incredibly and irreducibly complex, it could never have simply
"come into being" as Darwinists insist.
Actually, the "life somehow assembled itself out of organic
molecules" dogma is every bit as absurd as the "everything
was created in six days" dogma, which the ID-ers understand and
exploit. But they also suggest that everything came into existence at
the hands of God (by whatever name) or "by means of outside
intervention", which makes clear how they're betting. "Outside
intervention" is a transparent euphemism for "You
Know What" (with apologies to J. K. Rowling). [In Rowling's
"Harry Potter" books, the arch villain is so despicable and
dreadful, his name should not even be uttered; thus he is referred to
as "You Know Who".
Similarly,
the very idea that humans might have been created by
extraterrestrials is so despicable and dreadful to mainstream
science and religion that no mention of it should be uttered; thus the
author refers to it as "You Know What". To Darwinists,
Creationists and ID-ers alike, creation at the hands of You Know What
is the most absurd suggestion of all. Yet it can be shown that You
Know What has the widest array of facts on its side and has the best
chance of being proved correct in the end.
Virtually every scientist worth their doctorate will insist that
somehow, some way, a form of evolution is at the heart of all life
forms and processes on Earth. By "evolution", they mean the
entire panoply of possible interpretations that might explain how,
over vast stretches of time, simple organisms can and do transform
themselves into more complex organisms. That broad definition gives
science as a whole a great deal of room to bob and weave its way
towards the truth about evolution, which ostensibly is its goal.
However, among individual scientists that same broadness of coverage
means nobody has a "lock" on the truth, which opens them up
to a withering array of internecine squabbles.
In Darwin's case, those squabbles were initially muted. Rightly
or wrongly, his theory served a much higher purpose than merely
challenging the way science thought about life's processes. It
provided something every scientist desperately needed: a strong
counter to the intellectual nonsense pouring from pulpits in every
church, synagogue and mosque in the world.
Since well before Charles Darwin was born, men of science knew
full well that God did not create the Earth or anything else in the
universe in six literal days. But to assert that publicly invited the
same kind of censure that erupts today onto anyone who dares to
challenge evolution openly. Dogma is dogma in any generation.
Darwin's honeymoon with his scientific peers was relatively
brief. It lasted only as long as they needed to understand that all he
had really provided was the outline of a forest of an idea, one that
only in broad terms seemed to account for life's stunningly wide
array. His forest lacked enough verifiable trees.
Even
so, once the overarching concept was crystallized as "natural
selection", the term "survival of the fittest" was
coined to explain it to laymen. When the majority of the public became
convinced that evolution was a legitimate alternative to Creationism,
the scientific gloves came off. In-fighting became widespread
regarding the trees that made up Darwin's forest.
Over time, scientists parsed Darwin's original forest into more
different trees than he could ever have imagined. That parsing has
been wide and deep, and it has taken down countless trees at the hands
of scientists themselves. But despite such thinning, the forest
remains upright and intact. Somehow, some way, there is a completely
natural force at work governing all aspects of the flow and change of
life on Earth. That is the scientific mantra, which is chanted
religiously to counter every Creationist--and now Intelligent
Design--challenge to one or more of the rotten trees that
frequently become obvious.
Even Darwin realized the data of his era did not provide
clear-cut evidence that his theory was correct. Especially troubling
was the absence of "transitional species" in the fossil
record. Those were needed to prove that, over vast amounts of time,
species did in fact gradually transform into other, "higher"
species.
So right out of the chute, the theory of evolution was on the
defensive regarding one of its cornerstones, and more than 140 years
later there are still no clear-cut transitional species apparent in
the fossil record.
Because this is the most vulnerable part of Darwin's theory,
Creationists attack it relentlessly, which has forced scientists
periodically to put forth a series of candidates to try to take the
heat off. Unfortunately for them, in every case those "missing
links" have been shown to be outright fakes and frauds. An
excellent account is found in Icons of Evolution by Jonathan Wells
(Regnery, 2000). But scientists are not deterred by such exposure of
their shenanigans. They feel justified because, they insist, not
enough time has passed for them to find what they need in a grossly
incomplete fossil record.
The truth is that some lengthy fossil timelines are missing, but many
more are well accounted for. Those have been thoroughly examined in
the past 140-plus years, to no avail. In any other occupation, a
140-year-long trek up a blind alley would indicate a wrong approach
has been taken. But not to scientists.
They
blithely continue forward, convinced of the absolute rightness of
their mission and confident their fabled missing link will be found
beneath the next overturned rock. Sooner or later, they believe, one
of their members will uncover it, so they all work in harmonious
concert towards that common goal. Individually, though, it's every man
and woman for themselves.
TWEEDLEDUM AND TWEEDLEDEE
Plants and animals evolve, eh? Alright, how do they evolve?
By
gradual but constant changes, influenced by adaptive pressures in
their environment that cause physical modifications to persist if
they are advantageous.
Can
you specify the kind of gradual change you're referring to?
In
any population of plants or animals, over time, random genetic
mutations will occur. Most will be detrimental, some will have a
neutral effect and some will confer a selective advantage, however
small or seemingly inconsequential it might appear.
Really?
But wouldn't the overall population have a gene pool deep enough to
absorb and dilute even a large change? Wouldn't a small change rapidly
disappear?
Well,
yes, it probably would. But not in an isolated segment of the
overall population. An isolated group would have a much shallower
gene pool, so positive mutations would stand a much better chance of
establishing a permanent place in it.
Really?
What if that positive mutation gets established in the isolated group,
then somehow the isolated group gets back together with the main
population? Poof! The mutation will be absorbed and disappear.
Well,
maybe. So let's make sure the isolated population can't get back
with the main group until crossbreeding is no longer possible.
How
would you do that?
Put
a mountain range between them, something impossible to cross. If
it's impossible to cross, how did the isolated group get there in
the first place?
If
you're asking me just how isolated is isolated, let me ask you one.
What kind of mutations were you talking about being absorbed?
Small,
absolutely random changes in base pairs at the gene level.
Really?
Why not at the chromosome level? Wouldn't change at the base pair
level be entirely too small to create any significant change? Wouldn't
a mutation almost have to be at the chromosome level to be noticeable?
Who
says? Change at that level would probably be too much, something the
organism couldn't tolerate. Maybe we're putting too much emphasis on
mutations.
Right!
What about environmental pressures? What if a species suddenly found
itself having to survive in a significantly changed environment?
One
where its members must adapt to the new circumstances or die out?
Exactly!
How would they adapt? Could they just will themselves to grow thicker
fur or stronger muscles or larger size?
That
sounds like mutations have to play a part.
Mutations,
eh? All right, how do they play a part?
This game of intellectual thrust and parry goes on constantly at
levels of minutiae that boggle an average mind.
-
Traditional
Darwinists are one-upped
by neo-Darwinists at every turn.
-
Quantum
evolutionists refashion
the work of those who support the theory of peripheral isolates.
-
Mathematicians
model mutation rates and selective forces, which biologists do not
trust.
-
Geneticists
have little use for paleontologists, who return the favor in
spades (pun intended).
-
Cytogenetics
labours to find a niche alongside genetics proper.
-
Population
geneticists utilize
mathematical models that challenge paleontologists and
systematists.
-
Sociobiologists
and evolutionary
psychologists struggle to make room for their ideas.
-
All
perform a cerebral dance of elegant form and exquisite symmetry.
Their
dance is, ironically, evolution writ large throughout science as a
process. New bits of data are put forth to a peer group.
The
new data are discussed, written about, criticized, written about
again, criticized some more. This is gradualism at work, shaping,
reshaping and reshaping again if necessary until the new data can
comfortably fit into the current paradigm in any field, whatever it
is. This is necessary to make it conform as closely as possible to
every concerned scientist's current way of thinking. To do it any
other way is to invite prompt rejection under a fusillade of withering
criticism.
This system of excruciating "peer review" is how independent
thinkers among scientists have always been kept in line. Darwin
was an outsider until he barged into the club by sheer, overpowering
brilliance. Patent clerk Einstein did the same. On the other
hand, Alfred Wegener was the German meteorologist who figured
out plate tectonics in 1915. Because he dared to bruise the egos of
"authorities" outside his own field, he saw his brilliant
discovery buried under spiteful criticism that held it down for 50
years. Every scientist in the game knows how it is played, and very
few dare to challenge its rules.
The restrictions on scientists are severe, but for a very good reason.
They work at the leading edges of knowledge, from where the
view can be anything from confusing to downright terrifying. Among
those who study the processes of life on Earth, they must cope with
the knowledge that a surprising number of species have no business
being here. In some cases, they can't even be here. Yet they are, for
better or worse, and those worst-case examples must be hidden or at
least obscured from the general public. But no matter how often facts
are twisted, data are concealed or reality is denied, the truth is out
there.
THE EMERGENCE OF DOMESTICATED PLANTS
There are two basic forms of plants and animals: wild and
domesticated. The wild ones far outnumber the domesticated ones, which
may explain why vastly more research is done on the wild forms. But it
could just as easily be that scientists shy away from the domesticated
ones because the things they find when examining them are so far
outside the accepted evolutionary paradigm.
Nearly all domesticated plants are believed to have appeared between
10,000 and 5,000 years ago, with different groups coming to different
parts of the world at different times. Initially, in the so-called Fertile
Crescent of modern Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, came
wheat, barley and legumes, among other varieties. Later on, in the Far
East, came wheat, millet, rice and yams. Later still, in the New
World, came maize (corn), peppers, beans, squash, tomatoes and
potatoes.
Many have "wild" predecessors that were apparently a
starting point for the domesticated variety, but others--like many
common vegetables--have no obvious precursors. But for those that do,
such as wild grasses, grains and cereals, how they turned into wheat,
barley, millet, rice, etc. is a profound mystery.
No botanist can conclusively explain how wild plants gave rise
to domesticated ones. The emphasis here is on
"conclusively". Botanists have no trouble hypothesizing
elaborate scenarios in which Neolithic (New Stone Age) farmers somehow
figured out how to hybridize wild grasses, grains and cereals, not
unlike Gregor Mendel when he cross-bred pea plants to figure
out the mechanics of genetic inheritance. It all sounds so simple and
so logical, almost no one outside scientific circles ever examines
it closely.
Gregor Mendel never bred his pea plants to be anything other
than pea plants. He created short ones, tall ones and different-
colored ones, but they were always pea plants that produced peas.
(Pea plants are a domesticated species, too, but that is irrelevant to
the point to be made here.)
On
the other hand, those New Stone Age farmers who were fresh out of
their caves and only just beginning to turn soil for the first time
(as the "official" scenario goes), somehow managed to
transform the wild grasses, grains and cereals growing around them
into their domesticated "cousins". Is that possible? Only
through a course in miracles!
Actually, it requires countless miracles within two large categories
of miracles. The first was that the wild grasses and grains and
cereals were useless to humans. The seeds and grains were maddeningly
small, like pepper flakes or salt crystals, which put them beyond the
grasping and handling capacity of human fingers. They were also hard,
like tiny nutshells, making it impossible to convert them to anything
edible. Lastly, their chemistry was suited to nourishing animals, not
humans.
So wild varieties were entirely too small, entirely too tough and
nutritionally inappropriate for humans. They needed to be greatly
expanded in size, greatly softened in texture and overhauled at the
molecular level--which would be an imposing challenge for modern
botanists, much less Neolithic farmers.
Despite the seeming impossibility of meeting those daunting
objectives, modern botanists are confident the first sodbusters had
all they needed to do it: time and patience. Over hundreds of
generations of selective crossbreeding, they consciously directed the
genetic transformation of the few dozen that would turn out to be most
useful to humans.
And
how did they do it? By the astounding feat of doubling, tripling
and quadrupling the number of chromosomes in the wild varieties!
In a few cases, they did better than that. Domestic wheat and oats
were elevated from an ancestor with seven chromosomes to their current
42--an expansion by a factor of six. Sugar cane was expanded from a
10-chromosome ancestor to the 80-chromosome monster it is today--a
factor of eight.
The
chromosomes of others, like bananas and apples, were only multiplied
by factors of two or three, while peanuts, potatoes, tobacco and
cotton, among others, were expanded by factors of four. This is not as
astounding as it sounds, because many wild flowering plants and trees
have multiple chromosome sets.
But that brings up what Charles Darwin himself called the
"abominable mystery" of flowering plants. The first ones
appear in the fossil record between 150 and 130 million years ago,
primed to multiply into over 200,000 known species. But no one can
explain their presence because there is no connective link to any form
of plants that preceded them.
It
is as if, dare I say it?, they were brought to Earth by something akin
to You Know What. If so, then it could well be that they were
delivered with a built-in capacity to develop multiple chromosome
sets, and somehow our Neolithic forebears cracked the codes for the
ones most advantageous to humans.
However the codes were cracked, the great expansion of genetic
material in each cell of the domestic varieties caused them to grow
much larger than their wild ancestors. As they grew, their seeds and
grains became large enough to be easily seen and picked up and
manipulated by human fingers. Simultaneously, the seeds and grains
softened to a degree where they could be milled, cooked and consumed.
And at the same time, their cellular chemistry was altered enough to
begin providing nourishment to humans who ate them. The only word that
remotely equates with that achievement is: miracle.
Of course, "miracle" implies that there was actually a
chance that such complex manipulations of nature could be carried out
by primitive yeomen in eight geographical areas over 5,000 years. This
strains credulity because, in each case, in each area, someone
actually had to look at a wild progenitor and imagine what it could
become, or should become, or would become.
Then
they somehow had to ensure that their vision would be carried forward
through countless generations that had to remain committed to
planting, harvesting, culling and crossbreeding wild plants that put
no food on their tables during their lifetimes, but which might feed
their descendants in some remotely distant future.
It is difficult to try to concoct a more unlikely, more absurd,
scenario, yet to modern-day botanists it is a gospel they believe with
a fervor that puts many "six day" Creationists to shame.
Why?
Because
to confront its towering absurdity would force them to turn to You
Know What for a more logical and plausible explanation.
To domesticate a wild plant without using artificial (i.e., genetic)
manipulation, it must be modified by directed crossbreeding, which is
only possible through the efforts of humans. So the equation is
simple.
-
Firstly,
wild ancestors for many (but not all) domestic plants do seem
apparent.
-
Secondly,
most domesticated versions did appear from 10,000 to 5,000 years
ago.
-
Thirdly,
the humans alive at that time were primitive barbarians.
-
Fourthly,
in the past 5,000 years, no plants have been domesticated that are
nearly as valuable as the dozens that were "created" by
the earliest farmers all around the world.
-
Put
an equal sign after those four factors and it definitely does not
add up to any kind of Darwinian model.
Botanists
know they have a serious problem here, but all they can suggest is
that it simply had to have occurred by natural means because no other
intervention--by God or You Know What--can be considered under any
circumstances.
That
unwavering stance is maintained by all scientists, not just botanists,
to exclude overwhelming evidence such as the fact that in 1837 the
Botanical Garden in St Petersburg, Russia, began concerted attempts to
cultivate wild rye into a new form of domestication. They are still
trying, because their rye has lost none of its wild traits,
especially the fragility of its stalk and its small grain. Therein
lies the most embarrassing conundrum botanists face.
To domesticate a wild grass like rye or any wild grain or cereal
(which was done time and again by our Neolithic forebears), two
imposing hurdles must be cleared. These are the problems of
"rachises" and "glumes", which I discuss in my
book, Everything You Know Is Wrong ; Book One: Human Origins (pp.
283-285) (Adamu Press, 1998). Glumes are botany's name for husks, the
thin covers of seeds and grains that must be removed before humans can
digest them. Rachises are the tiny stems that attach seeds and grains
to their stalks.
While growing, glumes and rachises are strong and durable, so rain
won't knock the seeds and grains off their stalks. At maturity, they
become so brittle that a breeze will shatter them and release their
cargo to propagate. Such a high degree of brittleness makes it
impossible to harvest wild plants because every grain or seed would be
knocked loose during the harvesting process.
So, in addition to enlarging, softening and nutritionally altering the
seeds and grains of dozens of wild plants, the earliest farmers also
had to figure out how to finely adjust the brittleness of every
plant's glumes and rachises.
That adjustment was of extremely daunting complexity, perhaps more
complex than the transformational process itself. The rachises had to
be toughened enough to hold seeds and grains to their stalks during
harvesting, yet remain brittle enough to be collected easily by human
effort during what has come to be known as "threshing".
Likewise,
the glumes had to be made tough enough to withstand harvesting after
full ripeness was achieved, yet still be brittle enough to shatter
during the threshing process. And--here's the kicker--each wild
plant's glumes and rachises required completely different degrees of
adjustment, and the final amount of each adjustment had to be
perfectly precise! In short, there is not a snowball's chance that
this happened as botanists claim it did.
THE EMERGENCE OF DOMESTICATED ANIMALS
As with plants, animal domestication followed a pattern of development
that extended 10,000 to 5,000 years ago. It also started in the Fertile
Crescent, with the "big four" of cattle, sheep, goats
and pigs, among other animals. Later, in the Far East, came
ducks, chickens and water buffalo, among others. Later
still, in the New World, came llamas and vicuna. This
process was not simplified by expanding the number of chromosomes.
All
animals--wild and domesticated--are diploid, which means they
have two sets of chromosomes, one from each parent. The number of
chromosomes varies as widely as in plants (humans have 46), but there
are always only two sets (humans have 23 in each).
The only "tools" available to Neolithic herdsmen were those
available to farming kinsmen: time and patience. By the same
crossbreeding techniques apparently utilized by farmers, wild
animals were selectively bred for generation after generation until
enough gradual modifications accumulated to create domesticated
versions of wild ancestors. As with plants, this process required
anywhere from hundreds to thousands of years in each case, and was
also accomplished dozens of times in widely separated areas around the
globe.
Once again, we face the problem of trying to imagine those first
herdsmen with enough vision to imagine a "final model", to
start the breeding process during their own lifetimes and to have it
carried out over centuries until the final model was achieved. This
was much trickier than simply figuring out which animals had a strong
pack or herding instinct that would eventually allow humans to take
over as "leaders" of the herd or pack.
For
example, it took unbridled courage to decide to bring a wolf cub into
a campsite with the intention of teaching it to kill and eat
selectively and to earn its keep by barking at intruders (adult wolves
rarely bark). And who could look at the massive, fearsome,
ill-tempered aurochs and visualize a much smaller, much more amiable
cow? Even if somebody could have visualized it, how could they have
hoped to accomplish it? An aurochs calf (or a wolf cub, for that
matter), carefully and lovingly raised by human "parents",
would still grow up to be a full-bodied adult with hardwired adult
instincts.
However it was done, it wasn't by crossbreeding. Entire suites of
genes must be modified to change the physical characteristics of
animals. (In an interesting counterpoint to wild and domesticated
plants, domesticated animals are usually smaller than their wild
progenitors.) But with animals, something more, something ineffable,
must be changed to alter their basic natures from wild to docile. To
accomplish it remains beyond modern abilities, so attributing such
capacity to Neolithic humans is an insult to our intelligence.
All examples of plant and animal "domestication" are
incredible in their own right, but perhaps the most incredible is the
cheetah. There is no question it was one of the first tamed animals,
with a history stretching back to early Egypt, India and China. As
with all such examples, it could only have been created through
selective breeding by Neolithic hunters, gatherers or early farmers.
One of those three must get the credit.
The cheetah is the most easily tamed and trained of all the big cats.
No reports are on record of a cheetah killing a human. It seems
specifically created for high speeds, with an aerodynamically designed
head and body. Its skeleton is lighter than other big cats; its legs
are long and slim, like the legs of a greyhound. Its heart, lungs,
kidneys and nasal passages are enlarged, allowing its breathing rate
to jump from 60 per minute at rest to 150 bpm during a chase. Its top
speed is 70 miles per hour, while a thoroughbred tops out at around 38
mph. Nothing on a savanna can outrun it. It can be outlasted, but not
outrun.
Cheetahs are unique because they combine physical traits of two
distinctly different animal families: dogs and cats. They belong to
the family of cats, but they look like long-legged dogs. They sit and
hunt like dogs. They can only partially retract their claws, like dogs
instead of cats.
Their
paw pads are thick and hard like a dog's, but to climb trees they use
the first claw on their front paws in the same way a cat does. The
light-colored fur on their body is like the fur of a short-haired dog,
but the black spots on their bodies are inexplicably the texture of
cat's fur. They contract diseases that only dogs suffer from, but they
also get "cat only" diseases.
There is something even more inexplicable about cheetahs. Genetic
tests have been done on them, and the surprising result was that in
the 50 specimens tested they were all, every one, genetically
identical with each other! This means the skin or internal organs
of any of the thousands of cheetahs in the world could be switched
with the organs of any other cheetah and not be rejected. The only
other place such physical homogeneity is seen is in rats and other
animals that have been genetically altered in laboratories.
Cheetahs stand apart, of course, but all domesticated animals have
traits that are not explainable in terms that stand up to rigorous
scientific scrutiny. Rather than deal with the embarrassment of
confronting such issues, scientists studiously ignore them and,
as with the mysteries of domesticated plants, explain them away as
best they can. For the cheetah, they insist it simply cannot be some
kind of weird genetic hybrid between cats and dogs, even though the
evidence points squarely in that direction. And why? Because that,
too, would move cheetahs into the forbidden zone occupied by You Know
What.
The problem of the cheetahs' genetic uniformity is explained by
something now known as the "bottleneck effect". What
it presumes is that the wild cheetah population--which must have been
as genetically diverse as its long history indicates--at some recent
point in time went into a very steep population decline that left only
a few breeding pairs alive. From that decimation until now, they have
all shared the same restricted gene pool.
Unfortunately, there is no record of any extinction events that would
selectively remove cheetahs and leave every other big cat to develop
its expected genetic variation. So, as unlikely as it seems, the
"bottleneck" theory is accepted as another scientific
gospel.
Here it is appropriate to remind scientists of Carl Sagan's
famous riposte when dealing with their reviled pseudoscience:
"Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." It
seems apparent that Sagan learned that process in-house.
It also leads us, finally, to a discussion of humans, who are so
genetically recent that we, too, have been forced into one of those
"bottleneck effects" that attempt to explain away the
cheetah.
THE ARRIVAL OF HUMANS
Like all plants and animals whether wild or domesticated, humans are
supposed to be the products of slight, gradual improvements to
countless generations spawned by vastly more primitive forebears. This
was firmly believed by most scientists in the 1980s, when a group of
geneticists decided to try to establish a more accurate date for when
humans and chimpanzees split from their presumed common ancestor.
Paleontologists used fossilized bones to establish a timeline that
indicated the split came between five and eight million years ago.
That wide bracket could be narrowed, geneticists believed, by charting
mutations in human mitochondrial DNA--small bits of DNA
floating outside the nuclei of our cells. So they went to work
collecting samples from all over the world.
When the results were in, none of the geneticists could believe it.
They had to run their samples through again and again to be certain.
Even then, there was hesitancy about announcing it. Everyone knew
there would be a firestorm of controversy, starting with the
paleontologists--who would be given the intellectual equivalent of a
black eye and a bloody nose and their heads dunked into a toilet for
good measure! This would publicly embarrass them in a way that had not
happened since the Piltdown hoax was exposed.
Despite the usual scientific practice of keeping a lid on data that
radically differs from a current paradigm, the importance of this new
evidence finally outweighed concern for the image and feelings of
paleontologists. The geneticists gathered their courage and stepped
into the line of fire, announcing that humans were not anywhere near
the official age range of eight to five million years old. Humans
were only about 200,000 years old. As expected, the howls
of protest were deafening.
Time and much more testing of mitochondrial DNA and male
Y-chromosomes now make it beyond doubt that the geneticists were
correct. And the paleontologists have come to accept it because
geneticists were able to squeeze humans through the same kind of
"bottleneck effect" they used to try to ameliorate the
mystery of cheetahs.
By doing so, they left paleontologists still able to insist that
humans evolved from primitive forebears walking upright on the
savannas of Africa as long ago as five million years, but that between
100,000 and 200,000 years ago "something" happened to
destroy nearly all humans alive at the time, forcing them to reproduce
from a small population of survivors.
That this "something" remains wholly unknown is a
given, although Creationists wildly wave their hands like know-it-alls
at the back of a classroom, desperate to suggest it was the Great
Flood. But because they refuse to move away from the biblical
timeline of the event (in the range of 6,000 years ago), nobody
can take them seriously. Still, it seems the two sides might work
together productively on this crucial issue. If only...
Apart from disputes about the date and circumstances of our origin
as a species, there are plenty of other problems with humans. Like
domesticated plants and animals, humans stand well outside the classic
Darwinian paradigm. Darwin himself made the observation that
humans were surprisingly like domesticated animals. In fact, we are so
unusual relative to other primates that it can be solidly argued that
we do not belong on Earth at all, that we are not even from Earth, because
we do not seem to have developed here.
We are taught that, by every scientific measure, humans are primates
very closely related to all other primates, especially chimpanzees and
gorillas. This is so ingrained in our psyches that it seems futile
even to examine it, much less to challenge it. But we will.
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Bones.
Human bones are much lighter than comparable primate bones. For
that matter, our bones are much lighter than the bones of every
"pre-human" ancestor through to Neanderthal. The
ancestor bones look like primate bones; modern human bones do not.
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Muscle.
Human muscles are significantly weaker than comparable muscles in
primates. Pound for pound, we are five to ten times weaker than
any other primate. Any pet monkey is evidence of that. Somehow,
getting "better" made us much, much weaker.
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Skin.
Human skin is not well adapted to the amount of sunlight striking
Earth. It can be modified to survive extended exposure by greatly
increasing melanin (its dark pigment) at its surface, which only
the black race has achieved. All others must cover themselves with
clothing or frequent shade or both, or sicken from radiation
poisoning.
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Body
Hair. Primates
need not worry about direct exposure to sunlight because they are
covered from head to toe in a distinctive pattern of long
body-hair. Because they are quadrupeds (move on all fours), the
thickest hair is on their back, the thinnest on the chest and
abdomen. Humans have lost the all-over pelt, and we have
completely switched our area of thickness to the chest and abdomen
while wearing the thin part on our back.
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Fat.
Humans have ten times as many fat cells attached to the underside
of their skin as primates. If a primate is wounded by a gash or
tear in the skin, when the bleeding stops the wound's edges lie
flat near each other and can quickly close the wound by a process
called "contracture". In humans, the fat layer is so
thick that it pushes up through wounds and makes contracture
difficult if not impossible. Also, contrary to the propaganda to
try to explain this oddity, the fat under human skin does not
compensate for the body hair we have lost. Only in water is its
insulating capacity useful; in air, it is minimal at best.
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Head
Hair. All
primates have head hair that grows to a certain length and then
stops. Human head hair grows to such lengths that it could be
dangerous in a primitive situation. Thus, we have been forced to
cut our head hair since we became a species, which may account for
some of the sharp flakes of stones that are considered primitive
hominid "tools".
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Fingernails
and Toenails. All
primates have fingernails and toenails that grow to a certain
length and then stop, never needing paring. Human fingernails and
toenails have always needed paring. Again, maybe those stone
"tools" were not only for butchering animals.
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Skulls.
The human skull is nothing like the primate skull. There is hardly
any fair morphological comparison to be made, apart from the
general parts being the same. Their design and assembly are so
radically different as to make attempts at comparison useless.
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Brains.
The comparison here is even more radical because human brains are
so vastly different. (To say "improved" or
"superior" is unfair and not germane, because primate
brains work perfectly well for what primates have to do to live
and reproduce.)
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Locomotion.
The comparison here is easily as wide as the comparison of brains
and skulls. Humans are bipedal; primates are quadrupeds. That says
more than enough.
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Speech.
Human throats are completely redesigned relative to primate
throats. The larynx has dropped to a much lower position, so
humans can break typical primate sounds into the tiny pieces of
sound (by modulation) that have come to be human speech.
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Sex.
Primate females have oestrous cycles and are sexually receptive
only at special times. Human females have no oestrous cycle in the
primate sense. They are continually receptive to sex. (Unless, of
course, they have the proverbial headache!)
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Chromosomes.
This is the most inexplicable difference of all. Primates have 48
chromosomes. Humans are considered vastly superior to them in a
wide array of areas, yet somehow we have only 46 chromosomes! This
begs the question of how we could lose two full chromosomes--which
represents a lot of DNA--in the first place, and in the
process become so much better. Nothing about it makes logical
sense.
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Genetic
Disorders. As
with all wild animals (plants, too), primates have relatively few
genetic disorders spread throughout their gene pools. Albinism is
one that is common to many animal groups as well as humans. But
albinism does not stop an animal with it from growing up and
passing the gene for it into the gene pool. Mostly, though,
serious defects are quickly weeded out in the wild. Often, parents
or others in a group will do the job swiftly and surely, so wild
gene pools stay relatively clear. In contrast, humans have over
4,000 genetic disorders, and several of those will absolutely kill
every victim before reproduction is possible. This begs the
question of how such defects could possibly get into the human
gene pool in the first place, much less how they remain so
widespread.
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Genetic
Relatedness. A
favorite Darwinist statistic is that the total genome (all
the DNA) of humans differs from chimpanzees by only 1% and
from gorillas by 2%. This makes it seem as if evolution is indeed
correct and that humans and primates are virtually kissing
cousins. However, what they don't stress is that 1% of the human
genome's three billion base pairs is 30 million base pairs--and
to any You Know What that can adroitly manipulate genes, 30
million base pairs can easily add up to a tremendous amount of
difference.
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Everything
Else. The above are the
larger categories at issue in the discrepancies between primates
and humans. There are dozens more listed as sub-categories below
one or more of these.
To
delve deeper into these fascinating mysteries, check The Scars of
Evolution by Elaine Morgan (Oxford University Press, 1990). Her
work is remarkable. And for a more in-depth discussion of the
mysteries within our genes and those of domesticated plants and
animals, see Everything You Know Is Wrong.
BREAKING RANKS
When all of the above is taken together--the inexplicable puzzles
presented by domesticated plants, domesticated animals and humans--it
is clear that Darwin cannot explain it, modern scientists
cannot explain it, not Creationists nor Intelligent Design proponents.
None of them can explain it, because it is not explainable in only
Earthbound terms.
We will not answer these questions with any degree of satisfaction
until our scientists open their minds and squelch their egos enough to
acknowledge that they do not, in fact, know much about their own
backyard. Until that happens, the truth will remain obscured.
My personal opinion, which is based on a great deal of independent
research in a wide range of disciplines relating to human origins, is
that ultimately Charles Darwin will be best known for his
observation that humans are essentially like domesticated animals.
I believe that what Darwin observed with his own eyes and
research is the truth, and that modern scientists would see it as
clearly as he did if only they had the motivation or the courage to
seek it out. But for now, they don't, so, until then, we can only poke
and prod at them in the hope of some day getting them to notice our
complaints and address them. In order to poke and prod successfully,
more people have to be alerted to the fact that another scientific
fraud is being perpetrated.
Future editions of Icons of Evolution will discuss the current era
when scientists ridiculed, ignored or simply refused to deal with a
small mountain of direct, compelling evidence that outside
intervention has clearly been at work in the genes of domesticated
plants, animals and humans. You Know What has left traces of their
handiwork all over our bodies, all through our gene pools. All that
will be required for the truth to come out is for a few
"insiders" to break ranks with their brainwashed peers.
Look to the younger generation. Without mortgages to pay, families to
raise and retirements to prepare for, they can find the courage to act
on strong convictions. Don't expect it of anyone over forty, possibly
even thirty. But somewhere in the world, the men and women have been
born who will take Darwinism down and replace it with the truth.
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