Not of course, all mutations would be relevant to your view of natural selection evolution. What have only germline cells, apart from being passed on to progeny, got anything to do with the “natural selection” part of your evolution theory.
Wow, just wow! You really don't understand anything at all about this subject do you? Traits that are passed on are the only ones that contribute to evolution. Ones that aren't heritable die with the individual. Individuals don't evolve, populations do.
That observed fact only demonstrates the permanence of species...
It doesn't demonstrate anything at all about the permanence or otherwise of species, it's just natural selection acting on one trait.
...and the lateral adaptation allowed within a gene pool which is what creationists believe in.
So you
do accept natural selection. As I said before, most creationists do, they just artificially limit it to (undefined) 'kinds' without justification. You really do need to learn your own side's propaganda a bit better, let alone the real science.
The moths remained moths never diverging into another species, no progressive evolution therefore no proof of natural selection...
Natural selection is not evolution, it's a mechanism by which evolution happens. The peppered moth is not meant to be a evidence (you've lapsed into 'proof' again, which shows you don't understand basic science) of common descent (evolution on a large scale) just the mechanism of natural selection.
...as is the case with your other ‘evidence’.
False. The mutations that can be observed and tracked through species, as I described
do provide evidence for common ancestors, and ultimately, when all of it is taken together, common descent of all life.
Still waiting for you to refute it or provide any of the evidence you claimed existed for your magic creation. And waiting, and waiting....
Don't really know why, actually. You've comprehensively shown that there is practically nothing about this subject that you understand anything about at all. Wall to wall ignorance of the subject.