Care to go through the original post and show me what’s been refuted? What’s unconfirmed? What doesn’t contradict O.E?
Okee doke.
1 and 2 fall into the "unconfirmed" category, since they are entirely based on Biblical claims without sufficient support.
3 can be considered refuted and not evidence of a young earth, since it is based on false assumptions about dating methods. Never is just one dating method used to determine the age of rocks, but multiple methods are used which can be verified in their accuracy within certain frames of time. And rocks aren't "formed" by volcanic eruptions, the matter that comprises them simply rises to the surface. They aren't "new" rocks, they're old rocks melted down into magma and then reformed.
4 is unconfirmed, as very little evidence actually exists of the Lincoln Memorial stalactites and their actual composition. Either way, it's erroneous to assert that the possibility of stalactites forming rapidly means they always do. For starters, we can actually measure the growth of stalactites in existing caves and see no evidence of stalactites forming rapidly anywhere else.
5 is also unconfirmed and doesn't indicate a young earth.
6 is just wild speculation as the image can be interpreted multiple ways.
7 is a refuted hoax (SOURCE:
Paluxy Dinosaur/"Man Track" controversy)
8 is unconfirmed and provides insufficient detail.
9 is unconfirmed and doesn't indicate a young earth. The figurine could have ended up under the layer of rock by numerous means, the rarity of such a find certainly indicates that this is more of a fluke than an indicator of ancient civilization. (SOURCE:
The Nampa figurine - Bad Archaeology)
10, 11 and 12 are also unconfirmed and don't indicate a young earth. At most, it indicates that soft tissue, under very specific circumstances, can be preserved much longer than once thought.