Page 177 - 24 Hours in the Life of a Muslim
P. 177

Harun Yahya
                                   Harun Yahya





                  So, with such disastrous events in mind, this is what evolu-
             tionists would have us believe: One day a fish undergoes a muta-
             tion; for example, it is affected, as the people of Hiroshima were,

             by being exposed to radiation or something similar. As a result of
             this mutation, some changes take place in the fish's body and, one
             day, it turns into a crocodile. This is a totally ridiculous claim.
             Furthermore, as we mentioned above, mutations are always
             harmful to living creatures. They either cripple them or make
             them very sick.
                  We can compare evolutionists' claims with the following ex-
             ample: If you took hold of an axe and hit a black and white televi-
             sion with it, could you change that television into a colour one? Of
             course not! If you randomly hit a television with an axe, you will
             merely end up with a smashed set. In the same way that hitting
             something haphazardly with an axe will inevitably damage it, so
             mutations harm living beings.



                  FOSSILS THAT EVOLUTIONISTS

                      JUST CAN'T SEEM TO FIND


                  A fossil is a part of an animal or a plant that has been dead for
             a very long time—usually thousands or even millions of years. It
             is preserved in rock formations in the earth's crust. In order for a
             plant or an animal to become a fossil, it must be buried almost im-
             mediately after it dies. For example, if there were a bird on the
             ground and a heap of sand suddenly fell on it and killed it, the re-
             mains of this bird could be preserved for millions of years.

             Similarly, there is a resin of some trees that becomes fossilized by
             geological processes, in which case it is then called "amber." On
             occasions in the past, this resin trapped insects, as it flowed down
             the tree trunks. It then solidified, and the amber and the insects in-




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