I'm fairly certain that this thread concerns whether there is any verifiable evidence for creationism.
Yes – that's what we call putting the cart before the horse.
Look, let's imagine that we work together, and I comment on a co-worker. I say, "John got up late today."
You observe John and you see that he looks a little frazzled. His hair is unkempt. He looks as though he didn't shower this morning. He's drinking a big Red Bull. You conclude that I'm right.
Yet perhaps we're both wrong. Maybe he went to bed late. Maybe the water was shut off in his neighborhood. Maybe he spent all night at the hospital with his daughter. Any of these explanations will explain the data we have. In short, the data support more than one theory.
Yet it's common here to claim that all the evidence supports Darwinism rather than creationism. How exactly does this work?
Well, we have a theory (Darwinism), which I will call D. We then think, assuming that Darwinism is correct, what will we observe? We will observe evidence, which I will call E. Then we go looking for that evidence, and we find it. So we conclude that the theory is correct. In short, our logical process is:
If D then E
E
Therefore, D.
The problem is that the above sequence is a formal logical fallacy known as affirming the consequent. Anyone could do the same. Here's a simple example:
If God created the Earth, then the Earth will exist.
The Earth exists.
Therefore, God created the Earth.
Well yes, that is evidence consistent with the idea that God created the Earth, but it's consistent with
a lot of other theories. In short, no amount of evidence that we collect will ever be sufficient to confirm the theory. The data will never be sufficient.