I already did, several times. But I will repost it for you and try to be even more clear for you to understand what you did:
Your quote:
You claim here that the only thing creation scientists can present is trying to discredit or poke holes in evolutionism, and claim that they have no affirmative evidence in support of the creation narrative on it's own.
But your assertion is unproven, and cannot be accepted as an established fact.
You haven't given us any reason to believe your assertion is true that creation science has never a made a case that can stand on it's own.
You could do that by citing an individual who advocates for creation science but fails to do anything but try to discredit evolutionism. I don't believe you will find a single professional or semi-professional advocate of creation science that takes that approach. I have certainly never seen any of them do what you claim, and I've read/listened to many of them.
Interesting. I have yet to see any creationist that did anything else. But, if you want, I can give some specific examples. They are in my library, so I have some familiarity with them.
'Defeating Darwinism' by Johnson.
'Refuting Evolution' by Sarfati.
Anything by Gish.
If you are unable to do that then you'd have to admit your claim is baseless and just an assertion, not a statement of fact, but merely a statement of your opinion.
I'll make a counter challenge. Find *one* creationist that actually supports their viewpoint based on evidence. I have seen a LOT of speculation collapses under the slightest scrutiny (laminar flow, anyone?, or how about the attempts to merge with general relativity?). But not *one* that can actually support anything they say with evidence. Instead, they pretty much uniformly attack evolution and other sciences (Big Bang is also a favorite target) without anything positive for their positions.
I'll go further. In their attacks, a primary tool is the 'quote mine'. They like to take legitimate scientific articles out of context and twist them to say exactly what they did not say. I recall an example I looked up where they claimed dating methods are unreliable. But, when I actually went to the source, that was not at all what the original paper said. Instead, it was looking at *when* the methods are reliable and what cautions need to be taken.