WorldNetDaily: Eroding evolution's believability
Evolution is a house of cards anyway, but Kelly Hollowell's latest commentary on "Flores Man", also known as "the real-life Hobbits", is instructive. Any specific evidence debunking yet another claim of evidence for evolution is valuable in and of itself, as any lawyer will tell you.
For 150 years, as Hollowell reminds us, the community of scientists has devoted itself to, at best an error, at worst a fraud. Someday I'll publish a blog detailing all the instances of flat-out dry-labbing with which the history of evolutionary biology is positively riddled. For now, let it suffice that not only is Flores Man misinterpreted at best, but the overwhelming weight of evidence--not to mention the Law of Averages--supports creation, not evolution.
For 150 years, as Hollowell reminds us, the community of scientists has devoted itself to, at best an error, at worst a fraud. Someday I'll publish a blog detailing all the instances of flat-out dry-labbing with which the history of evolutionary biology is positively riddled. For now, let it suffice that not only is Flores Man misinterpreted at best, but the overwhelming weight of evidence--not to mention the Law of Averages--supports creation, not evolution.
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