Do you realize I was talking about the first single celled forms of life and not about modern single celled forms of life.
Then what did this life look like, and why do you say that it was too complex?
" The sheer complexity of the earliest life forms. Single celled organisms (the first form of life) are more complex that the space shuttle."
So what is that complexity? How was the first life more complex than the space shuttle, and where is your evidence to back these assertions?
No it is up to you. I already know why I think each one of them is a problem for evolutionists, your the one that doesn't so it is up to you.
Since you haven't demonstrated that any of them are problems, there is nothing to disprove. All you have are bare assertions.
This is intellectually dishonest. My claiming that a few pictures did not convince me of macroevolution does not in any way imply that I would reject all the evidence that may be out there. This kind of junk just makes me tired.
Those are real fossil species. If fish with legs won't convince you, then what will?
Why is this just another link where you did not provide what I requested again? This is the last time I am going to say this. For at least the tenth time if your going to post a link to something copy and paste the most challenging portion of what is at that link. If I find it compelling I will investigate the link. Do you understand what I have been asking for?
What this means is that two insertions that happen independently of one another should occur at different spots in the genome in the vast majority of cases. Therefore, when we find the same insertion at the same spot in the genomes of two individuals this means that the insertion happened only once in a common ancestor. Again, if two individuals do not share common ancestry then their ERVs should be found at different places in their genome. If they share a relatively recent ancestor then they should share nearly all of their ERVs at the same location in their genomes which are called orthologous ERVs. This is the scientific test for common ancestry.
So how does this apply to human ancestry? The human genome has over 200,000 ERVs. There are about the same number in the chimp genome. Of the ERVs in the human genome, nearly all of them are found at the same position in the chimp genome. Less than 100 human ERVs do not have an ortholog (i.e. same ERV at the same position) in the chimp genome. This is smoking gun evidence for common ancestry between chimps and humans.
ERVs: Evidence for the Origin of Humans
"Dog" is a taxonomic classification. Here is what you said about Chihuahuas and Great Danes:
"
The bible affirms evolution within "kinds". In this case everything was a type of dog and so it is evidence for microevolution. "--1robin
Obviously, taxonomic classifications are relevant because you are using them. Therefore, primate is just as relevant as dog.