Friday, July 3, 2020

Addressing a Supposed "Beneficial" Mutation



In today's post I thought I would briefly go over a supposed beneficial mutation where a certain bacteria undergoes a genetic change in order to digest Nylonase.



I just wanted to point out that this isn't an increase in the genome of information,  because this is rather an example of borrowed information. It did this as a trade off at the expense of other systems within the bacteria, in other words the bacteria reorganized pre-existing parts. What evolutionist may not tell you is that they go back to not being able to digest nylon when they are put back in a normal environment.

There are big differences between bacteria and multi-cellular organisms. For one bacteria can swap their DNA by just by  touching one another. What's also fascinating is that they also are capable of re-engineering their DNA so they can digest whatever is available. Multi cellular organisms cannot do this because their cells have to be able to grow in unison. What would happen if a multi-cellular organism tried to pull off something like what this bacteria did. The beneficial mutated cells in the organism would then outgrow and out populate the other cells and those newly mutated cells would be considered a tumor.

In Conclusion we can deduct from this example that this bacteria is not a good example to be used for Darwinian evolution. This is mainly because animals undergo changes all the time. The bacteria didn't change into an octopus, or giraffe. Changes within kinds are completely biblical, you need one animal changing into another for Darwinism to be true, which is something no one has observed.
It has to be taken on faith, hence this is why Evolution is a religion.



Reference : Ian Juby's Crevorant 80 Nylonase



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