Any claim that begins with an appeal to conspiracy theory is immediately suspect.
Actually
zero of these supposed clocks tells us anything about the age of the earth, solar system or universe. They, at best, tell us the age of
the subject in question but they don't inform us about the age of the earth.
Actually most people do not know about these supposed clocks because none of them inform us about the age of the earth and many of the claims made by Creationists are specious at best. Also, the continued appeal to conspiracy theory doesn't help the author.
1. Moon recession. Addressed. Evidence from ancient coral reefs show that tidal interaction between earth and moon was different in the past.
http://www.reasons.org/articles/q-a-is-the-moon-s-recession-evidence-for-a-young-earth
2. Oil pressure. Oil, once formed, can be trapped and there will be no loss of pressure. Oil also can slowly move around increasing and decreasing in pressure as it migrates.
3. Shrinking sun. The sun isn't shrinking.
http://www.skepticfriends.org/forum/showquestion.asp?faq=4&fldAuto=21
4. Oldest living thing. Tree rings match up from fossil trees back at least 15,000 years. Also this clonal tree is 80,000 years old.
- Note this one is an example of what I'm talking about. The oldest living thing doesn't say anything about the age of the earth. It only tells us the age of the oldest living thing.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pando_(tree)
5. Atmospheric helium - "If we use the same assumptions that radiometric dating experts make: i.e. no initial helium in the earth's early atmosphere, a constant decay rate, and
that nothing has occurred to add to or take away the helium." That's a bad assumption since helium can escape the atmosphere into space.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0032063392901236
6. Short period comets. Kuiper belt objects have been observed. Orbital trajectories of short period comets suggest they originated in the area where we supect the Oort cloud resides.
That's enough for now.