I'm not replying specifically to this post, but I wanted to let you know that I've had a response to your challenge to debate the creation scientists. Here is the reply:-
"That’s an interesting ‘challenge’. However, this person says: I would be happy to debate any creationist in an open written debate on genetics with limited but pragmatic rules (e.g. must use references that are accessible online).
With respect, all our staff scientists, myself included, have done exactly this on many occasions. An example of just one such debate (of the kind he mentions) is here:
http://creation.com/australian-skeptics-vs-cmi-australia
See also:
http://creation.com/images/pdfs/skeptics_vs_creationists.pdf
However, a written debate, though ‘open’, is not seen by everyone. Also, written ‘debates’ are really just a case of people arguing back and forth after consulting websites or articles that are deemed to support their side of the argument. The kind of debate that CMI sometimes mentions in our literature—in relation to our charge that evolutionists generally refuse to debate informed creationists—is a public
live debate between two well-informed and suitably qualified people on both sides of the argument. It is such debates that most/all evolutionists run scared of doing, usually under the ridiculous excuse that “I don’t debate creationists because I don’t want to give them the oxygen of publicity”! This is typical of the excuse of the infamous Richard Dawkins for instance.
If your correspondent is a qualified geneticist and would be willing to debate a creationist geneticist, let me know and I’ll see if this is a possibility"
Your move (and yes, I agree with the creationists that a "live" debate along the lines I suggested earlier would be much better). Even better still would be if it were shown in front of a studio audience, with a poll taken before and after the debate of a few key questions such as:-
- How many of you think that evolution best explains the way life as we know it came to be?
- How many think that creation by God is a better explanation?
- How many seriously doubt that the universe is really billions of years old?
- How many think that the age suggested by the Bible, i.e., just a few thousand years, could be an alternative possibility?
- How many think that the Big Bang, without any need for a deity is a good explanation for the beginning of the universe?
- How many think that God made the universe by his supernatural powers instead?
- How many, having watched the debate, have changed from believing that only non-supernatural forces account for all reality?
- Conversely, how many who originally thought that God was a good explanation for what we see around us have now changed their mind and feel that what we know from science is adequate to explain everything?