Page 108 - The Miracle in the Cell
P. 108

THE MIRACLE IN THE CELL
                the pancreas to produce insulin, and then give the command to stop
                once enough insulin had been secreted.
                    These two "explanations" are obviously illogical. The evolution-
                ists' beliefs are exactly like this, but because they themselves know
                how great a lie it is, they prefer not to bring it up and try to sweep it
                under the carpet.
                     With this example of insulin, the hopeless impasse into which
                evolutionary logic has fallen brings us to one conclusion: The first per-
                son who ever existed had a pancreas just as we do. The "evolution" of
                this organ is in no way possible.
                     Undoubtedly the same insight can be applied to other organs,
                different systems and processes in the body. Because thousands of
                other hormones and enzymes in the body are just as vital as insulin, if
                not more so. All of these avert critical situations, and most entail
                adjustments much more complex than maintaining the control of
                insulin. The system that regulates blood pressure, for instance, is
                made up of much more complicated measurements and processes
                than the pancreatic system.
                     Wherever you look in the body, you will be faced with the same
                situation. A person with no kidneys will live three days, at the most.
                Someone with no lungs, on the other hand, won't survive for more
                than one or two minutes. For anyone without a digestive system, even
                without just a small intestine, to live a week would be considered a
                miracle. It would be impossible to last one or two hours without the
                liver and its nearly 200 different functions. It would be impossible to
                withstand the absence of a heart for even three to five seconds, to say
                nothing of the brain, obviously.
                     None of these organs could have formed "step by step" as a result
                of evolution. No human body could have waited for millions of years
                to receive a kidney as a result of a chance mutation. Consequently, the
                clear truth that stares us in the face is that the very first person pos-
                sessed the exact same body structure we have today; that man was




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