Page 143 - Is Rumism a Threat ?
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Adnan Oktar (Harun Yahya) 141
anvil and stirrup must each come into existence in the same perfect and equal
state. Random mutations must form heart valves on both sides in the same way;
the valves and auricles produced by random mutations must be formed simulta-
neously and equally compatible with one another; they must be flawless, in their
proper places. Huge discrepancies would appear if this symmetry and order could
not be maintained in every organ of the body. Bizarre structures with its one ear
upside down, one unusual tooth, one eye on the forehead while the other on the
nose, would appear. But living organisms do not possess such imbalances.
According to the claims of the Darwinists, everything formed by mutations must be
symmetrical and compatible. However, all mutations are harmful. In the past, it was
assumed that 99% of the mutations were harmful while the remaining 1% was neu-
tral. Yet new researches revealed that those 1% of mutations that take place in those
regions of the DNA that do not code proteins and were thus assumed to be harmless,
are in fact harmful in the long run. That is why scientists named these mutations as
'silent mutations'. It is impossible for mutations that are absolutely harmful to
form rational, compatible, symmetrical organs at the same time.
Mutations can be likened to shooting at an intact structure with a machine gun.
Shooting at an intact object will completely ruin its structure. One of the bullets prov-
ing ineffective, or curing a pre-existing infection in the body by cauterizing it, does
not change the result. The organism would already be ruined by the remaining 99
bullets that hit it.
Lynn Margulis, a member of the US National Academy of Sciences, has made
the following confession regarding the evident harmful effects of mutations:
antenna leg
Evolutionists have been trying
to form an example of useful
eyes
mutation by subjecting flies to
mutations since the beginning
of the century. All they attained
as a result of decades of stud-
ies are crippled, diseased and
defective flies.
On the left: Head of a normal
fruit fly
mouth On the right: A mutated fruit fly