Posted on 10/19/2012 9:11:14 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I know one thing for certain.
Once we are all dead, there will not be a single complaint.
ROFL
Nah; wrong conclusion. The Rift Valley Game & Fish Commission wildlife biologists drained the lake to eradicate undesirable species, then restocked it with 300 species of cichlids that were endangered elsewhere. *<];-')
Grab both ankles...
;’)
I have come to the conclusion that many of those who think that they believe in the theory of evolution are actually addicted to fantasy. They love fabricating “what ifs” and “it could have beens”, creating grand, grand scenarios, almost as if, in their own minds, they become a creator themselves. They don’t need cognisant logic, all they need is a slim thread of supposed evidence, and off they go, conjuring up grand illusions of what might have happened millions and millions of years ago, but we know never did. Their minds are basically trapped, held hostage by what appears to be an addiction that gives them some sort of weird and unnatural high.
Must be.
Hope you’re doing ok. ;)
I recently cut-down a tree in my yard that was looking really skanky. Looking at the rings on the stump, you could clearly see about 25 years or regular, healthy growth, but the last five rings were blurred, irregular, and frankly sick looking. Matched the tree’s latest appearance.
Someone needs to check Al Gore’s teeth.
Sounds sketchy. This is a study based on the teeth of an “eel-like” creature that lived when no fish lived?
Inhofe: EPA 'punting' regs until after election that 'spell doom' for jobs, economy
Global Warming on Free Republic
Imagine that.
I just can’t imagine what that does to the evolutionists position on the amount of mutations necessary over the amount of time now left to produce life.
/s
Does that fall under *punctuated equilibrium*?
They aren’t “science”, they’re conjecture.
As you said, “speculative”.
No control, no repeatability, no falsifying conditions provided, etc.
Maybe “Punctured Equivocation”. Gould, the worm man, found a pogo stick approach to evolution made him the bad boy of paleontology and that appears to have been a goal for him.
Still his “Wonderful Life” on the Burgess Shale is an interesting book.
And then stucco was invented and a metropolis called Phoenix rose from the caliche and cactus, a fortress where mankind could huddle around the refrigeration in chilly darkness.
Thanks for the ping!
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