I did supported my claim but you ignore it.
1 the difference between humans and chimps is suppose to be 2% this means that for every 100 “leters” there would be 2 letters that are different
2 if the genome is 3,000,000,000 base pairs long
3 2% of 3,000,000,000 is 60,000,000
4 I order to arrive at the 2% difference humans and chimps need 30,000,000 Mutations each
What’s so controversial about this?
The fact that you are incapable of understanding the actual question?
Any dolt can multiply numbers, but I am not asking you to multiply numbers. Is it really this hard to support your own claims?
Let me provide some context (these quotes are all from this thread, so I will not link to each one) - I have bolded or colored certain words or phrases for emphasis:
Leroy:"5 million years is not enough time"
tas: "for what???"
Leroy: "not
enough time For
30M beneficial mutations (or something close to 30M) To have occurred, become selected and fixed in the population.
.....
tas:
"As a ReMine devotee, you must know that his calculations based on
Haldane's model set the limit at 1667 FBEs in 10 million years. Not 30 million in 5 million years. The original argument that YOU made was that even ReMine's farcical 500,000 such mutations were 'not enough'.
Your claims then morphed to this absurd 30 MILLION FBEs, and not enough time.
But the thing that none of you bothered to even try to address is WHY you think it is not enough or not enough time.
THAT all hinges entirely on how many such mutations would have been required AND what traits the ancestor had in the first place. And you have certainly not even tried to address that.
If it really only took 125 beneficial mutations to allow for obligate bipedalism, and another 500 for other gross morphological alterations (which are generally minor given the common traits among primates), that leaves several hundred to those many creationists focus on, our cognitive abilities.
Also - your pal ReMine allowed for several thousand fixed phenotype-altering neutral mutations as well. Didn't you know that?"
....
Leroy: "Just think about it in the last 30 years (since the genome project started)
not a single mutation has been observed to become fixed in the human population, and you are supposed to average 6.6 per year"
Tas: "Really?
I was unaware that someone has been keeping track.
But you must know of such a person or more likely, large team of people, busily sampling all 140 million people born a year for the last 30 years to see if they possess a new fixed mutation. Maybe they work for the ICR or DI or something. Regardless, I'm betting you will readily provide the documentation supporting your claims."
.....
Tas: "STILL waiting for evidence re:
1. All mutations needing to be beneficial
2. Transposons magically spreading through a population faster than any other mutational event - in 1 generation!
3. the number of beneficial mutations required to get a human trait from a human ancestor's trait
4. the number of traits that must be accounted for via fixed beneficial mutations
5. what those traits are
6. how were any of the above determined
7. no new mutations in the human population in 30 years"
You have not even TRIED to address any of those questions that are directly related to YOUR claims.