Saturday, August 17, 2013

A god-soaked fucktard asked "Can you give evidence proving the Theory of Evolution true and doesn't require me to have faith? Some poor examples would be anything that requires me to look back millions of year ago, before mankind or any 'intelligent life' was around to document what you would have me believe."

I gave the uneducated moron this answer (as if a Christian retard is able to understand anything):

I have exactly what you're looking for. All you got to do is find a dead human fetus to see this evidence for evolution for yourself.

It's best for you to get it straight from biologist so please excuse this copy and paste job:

One of my favorite cases of embryological evidence for evolution is the furry human fetus.We are famously known as "naked apes" because, unlike other primates, we don't have a thick coat of hair. But in fact for one brief period we do--as embryos. Around sixth months after conception, we become completely covered with a fine, downy coat of hair called lanugo. Lanugo is usually shed about a month before birth, when it's replaced by the more sparsely distributed hair with which we're born. (Premature infants, however, are sometimes born with lanugo, which soon falls off.) Now, there's no need for a human embryo to have a transitory coat of hair. After all, it's a cozy 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit in the womb. Lanugo can be explained only as a remnant of our primate ancestry: fetal monkeys also develop a coat of hair at about the same stage of development. Their hair, however, doesn't fall out, but hangs on to become the adult coat. And, like humans, fetal whales also have lanugo, a remnant of when their ancestors lived on land.
-- Jerry Coyne, University of Chicago biologist

• Lanugo. This little-known developmental phenomenon is an important clue to our mammalian past. Lanugo is a coat of fine, downy hair that fetuses grow while in the womb, covering the entire body except for the soles of the feet and the palms of the hands. Typically, lanugo is shed by the seventh or eighth month of pregnancy, although premature infants may retain it for several weeks after birth. The question is why we grow it at all, and the theory of evolution can easily explain this as a vestigial characteristic retained from our furry ancestors.
-- From a science website

For every evidence for evolution there is a professional liar who lies about it. However while they can pretend this evidence is not evidence for anything they have never once been able to explain the existence of lanugo on human fetuses and whale fetuses.

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