Page 251 - The Microworld Miracle
P. 251

THE  COMMON EVOLUTION  SCENARIO
                 The proponents of evolution have always experienced grave

            difficulty in explaining the close relationship between insects and
            plants, the vital links between their shared lives and the great range
            of plant-insect interactions.
                 As you know, insects suddenly appear in the fossil record,
            with no primitive forerunner behind them, and this applies to

            plants as well. In particular, fossils from 43 different families of
            flowering plants, which make the greatest use of insects, appear
            suddenly in the fossil record. There is no question of any interme-
            diate form or primitive ancestor. Yet according to the mechanisms
            of evolution, such a wide variety of plants should have left behind
            millions of intermediate-form fossils of relatively primitive ances-

            tors. However, even though fossils of most living species have been
            found, no such primitive or transitional fossils have ever been
            found.
                 Lack of evidence is a familiar dilemma for evolutionists. Since
            they are prepared for such situations, proponents of the theory

            have made a habit of speculations and scenarios. In employing this
            unscientific method, the existence of proof is irrelevant. Advocates
            take the mechanisms of evolution as a starting point, and describe
            events as they imagine they should have been, rather than as they
            were.. Then, even though all the evidence argues against them they       HARUN YAHYA
            seek to make a reality of that fairy tale. However, it is easy to ask

            just the right questions in order to understand the fraudulent na-
            ture of those defenseless scenarios.
                 The insect species involved in the claim of joint evolution are     (ADNAN OKTAR)
            the Coleoptera, or beetles—a very numerous group, constituting



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