Page 500 - Bigotry: The Dark Danger
P. 500

Bigotry:
                                       The Dark Danger



                                                          legs
                            antenna
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                                       mouth














             Evolutionists have been trying to form an example of useful mutation by sub-
             jecting flies to mutations since the beginning of the century. All they attained
             as a result of decades of studies are crippled, diseased and defective flies.
             On the left: Head of a normal fruit fly
             On the right: A mutated fruit fly

             organisms with proper structures either died or were severely dam-
             aged by mutations.

                 The reason for this is very simple:  DNA has a very complex
             structure, and random effects can only harm it. The American
             geneticist B. G. Ranganathan explains this as follows:


                 First, genuine mutations are very rare in nature. Secondly, most
                 mutations are harmful since they are random, rather than order-

                 ly changes in the structure of genes; any random change in a
                 highly ordered system will be for the worse, not for the better.
                 For example,  if an earthquake were to shake a highly
                 ordered structure such as a building, there would be a ran-
                 dom change in the framework of the building which, in all





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