Page 133 - The Evolution Deceit
P. 133
The Mo lec u lar Im passe of Ev o lu tion 131
If you have managed to sustain your belief in this story so far, then
you should have no trouble surmising how the town's other buildings,
plants, highways, sidewalks, substructures, communications, and trans-
portation systems came about. If you possess technical knowledge and are
fairly conversant with the subject, you can even write an extremely "scien-
tific" book of a few volumes stating your theories about "the evolutionary
process of a sewage system and its uniformity with the present structures".
You may well be honoured with academic awards for your clever studies,
and may consider yourself a genius, shedding light on the nature of hu-
manity.
The theory of evolution, which claims that life came into existence by
chance, is no less absurd than our story, for, with all its operational sys-
tems, and systems of communication, transportation and management, a
cell is no less complex than a city.
The Miracle in the Cell and the End of Evolution
The complex structure of the living cell was unknown in Darwin's
day and at the time, ascribing life to "coincidences and natural conditions"
was thought by evolutionists to be convincing enough.
The technology of the 20th century has delved into the tiniest parti-
cles of life and has revealed that the cell is the most complex system
mankind has ever confronted. Today we know that the cell contains power
stations producing the energy to be used by the cell, factories manufactur-
ing the enzymes and hormones essential for life, a databank where all the
necessary information about all products to be produced is recorded, com-
plex transportation systems and pipelines for carrying raw materials and
products from one place to another, advanced laboratories and refineries
for breaking down external raw materials into their useable parts, and spe-
cialised cell membrane proteins to control the incoming and outgoing ma-
terials. And these constitute only a small part of this incredibly complex
system.
W. H. Thorpe, an evolutionist scientist, acknowledges that "The most
elementary type of cell constitutes a 'mechanism' unimaginably more
complex than any machine yet thought up, let alone constructed, by
man." 106
A cell is so complex that even the high level of technology attained