Page 47 - The Miracle in the Mosquito
P. 47
Phases of Development
According to evolutionary theory, thousands of years ago
mosquitoes must have had a simpler structure. In this imaginary
scenario, let’s suppose that the respiratory tubes of the mosquitoes
of the time had not yet developed. So what about the mosquito lar-
vae of the time?
1) The larva could not stay head-down in the water, so they
would hold their heads above water in order to breathe. The in-
evitable conclusion of this would be, of course, that all the larvae
die of hunger.
2) Let’s suppose that a respiratory tube is appended to the
body of the larva by chance (we will discuss the impossibility of
this later), the larvae would drown due to the absence of oil at the
tip of the tube to prevent water getting into it. The larva would not
even have a second to wait for the cells, which synthesise this oil
to form in the body. As has been demonstrated, this state of affairs
creates inconsistencies in evolutionary theory itself.
3) Let’s suppose that the respiratory tube and the oil at the tip
of this tube somehow formed at the same time on the larva’s body.
It would only save the life of that particular larva, because the lar-
va would not be able to pass on a change in its body to the next
generation (Just as a woman who cuts off her finger does not give
birth to a child with a missing finger). Therefore, in order for a
bodily change to be passed on to the next generation, it is neces-
sary for evolution to add the entire genetic code to the DNA locat-
ed in the creature’s reproductive cells, rather than just creating a
new organ or organelle.
This is a very important point. For this reason, let’s examine
the subject by means of another example. Let’s suppose that a new
organ, for example a liver, was appended to the body of a creature
claimed by the evolutionists to be one of the ancestors of man. The
liver’s genetic code consists of millions of ciphers. Every one of
these ciphers has to be added to the DNA in the reproductive cells
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