Well, here's one for starters (the link follows the quoted text):-
http://creation.com/what-about-the-big-bang#star
You know, this may sound mildly snobby, but when I sourced my claim, I referred to NASA, a university lecture, and a mainstream pop science resource. I think that trumps a site whose credibility literally could not be lower if it claimed that the earth was flat! I do not have access to the New Scientist article CMI is citing. However, given that various reliable university and scientific sources have offered me information on star formation which runs directly contrary to their claims, I would say that I have absolutely no reason to take them seriously. Then again, I fundamentally have no reason to take anything they say seriously at all until they remove the 15-year-old
nonsense about the lost squadron.
I've watched a video on the complexity of the human eye and I have to say that to suggest that it could have come about by random, chance processes takes a hell of a lot more faith than I have.
Not_By_Chance, let me just offer you a little heart-to-heart here.
You don't understand evolution. At all. You have no training in the field, you have no expertise, you don't understand the basic facts, and anyone who visited German high school has forgotten more about the subject than you ever took the time to learn and
still knows more than you about it.
And you know what? There's nothing wrong with that. Honestly, there's tons of things people don't know much about, either due to lack of interest, or lack of access to information, or whatever. I don't
get quantum physics, mostly because I don't particularly care about it very much; it's not my field, not my interest. But I have the courtesy to recognize that I don't get it, and not bum around discussion forums where it is a topic of interest offering my uninformed opinion in a way that essentially all the people who
do know what they're talking about agree is really wrong.
Your understanding of the topic is as good as my understanding of quantum physics, or Kent Hovind's understanding of the tax code (or, you know, evolution). The fact that you would refer to evolution as a random, chance process shows a foundational lack of understanding about it. The evolution of the human eye is well-understood - we can point out an evolutionary pathway, and we can point to intermediaries all the way through the fossil record, indicating that yes, this is how eyesight evolved. It is not some point of contention, it is not something scientists are still puzzling over, it is well-understood
and has been well-understood since before Darwin's days. Darwin himself explained this problem, one that CMI apparently still has yet to grasp, in "On The Origin Of Species", and explained how to resolve it.
CMI either doesn't understand evolution, or hopes you don't. As stated previously, any reasonable debate with them is impossible, because they care less about where the evidence leads than about their foregone conclusions. And as a result, they get so,
so much wrong that it hurts. Even these examples of "irreducible complexity" do nothing more than either ignore the research on the subject or distort it. When they say, for example:
"Minnich points out that only about 10 of the 40 components can be explained by co-option, but the other 30 are brand new. Also, the very process of assembly
in the right sequence requires other regulatory machines, so is in itself irreducibly complex.9"
This is wrong, and we've known this is wrong for almost a decade. At best, CMI is so out of date as to be worthless; at worst, they're intentionally lying. Same issue as with the lost squadron; same issue as with their claims of "new information" (this is one we've known to be wrong since before the internet existed, so they
really have no excuse); same as god knows how many other claims made. I wonder if I could find a single page on there without some non-trivial error. Either way, they are
not a good source for anyone, least of all someone who, like you,
has no formal training or education on the subject!
I'm really not saying this to be mean. Honestly, I'm not. But I need you to recognize this. You're attacking an extremely well-established, very complex scientific theory, and you know almost nothing about it.
At some point, there should be a little voice in your head that pipes up, and says, "Hang on, do I really think I know better than all of these well-established experts?" When that little guy speaks up, please, for the love of Batman, listen to him. You say that IC is a serious problem for evolution? Why is it that you can't find any significant portion of evolutionary biologists who agree? Why do the experts all disagree? When a website that flat-out states that the evidence is less important than what we hold on faith goes against a massive scientific consensus in order to prop up its religious faith, maybe take its claims with a grain of salt instead of swallowing them wholesale?