Page 12 - The Miracle in the Ant
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question for which an answer must certainly be sought.
Evolutionists, when trying to answer this question, claim that ants
evolved 80 million years ago from "Tiphiidae", which is an archaic genus
of wasps, and that they started socializing 40 million years ago – sud-
denly, "at their own discretion" - and that they constitute the highest lev-
el of the evolution of insects. However, they do not in any way explain
the causes and the process of development of this socialization. The ba-
sic mechanism of evolution requires living beings to fight with each oth-
er to the end, for their survival. Therefore, each genus and every indi-
vidual within that genus can think of only itself and its own offspring
(Why and how it started thinking of its offspring is another dead end for
Evolution, but we are skipping this point for now). It is, of course, unan-
swered how this type of a "law of evolution" can form a social system
with sacrifice right at its core.
The questions to be answered are not limited to these. Could these
creatures whose nerve cells for one million of them only weigh 20
grams, have adopted the resolution to socialize in groups "just like that"?
Or could they have got together to set the rules for this socializing after
adopting such a resolution? Even if we accept that they could, would all
of them obey this new system without exception? Have they formed an
advanced social order by founding colonies with millions of members
after overcoming all these seeming impossibilities?
Then how did a "caste system" emerge out of this struggle? First, this
question has to be answered: How has the difference between the
queen and the worker developed? Evolutionists at this point will say that
a group among the workers abandoned working and developed a phys-
iology different from the worker ants by going through genetic varia-
tions over a long period of time. However, we are then faced with the
question of how the said "would be queens" were nourished through-
out this transformation period. The queen ants do not look for food.
They are fed with food brought by the workers. Some workers may have
seen themselves as "queens", so how and why have other workers ac-
cepted this hierarchy? Furthermore, why have they consented to feed
this queen? The "struggle for life" that they are in, according to "evolu-
tion", requires that they only think of themselves.
All insects spend most of their time in looking for food. They find
Kar›nca Mucizesi
12 THE MIRACLE IN THE ANT