1. All living beings, even the Earth itself, is slowly atrophying. This is either because Adam brought sin into the world or because God created everything in its perfect, complete form which is gradually 'winding down'. Evolution cannot happen because nothing is getting better.
This is basically a very pessimistic idea as it suggests that God has abondoned us; indeed many evolutionists accuse creationists of being 'deists'. I would even say that according to this argument Jesus did not come down here teach us how to make the world a better place (what's the point? Everything's just getting worse) but is simply offered as a sort of 'get out of jail free' card. Believe in him and when you die you'll leave this miserable world forever.
A common misconception of perfection in light of God. See, perfection of a being in which is alive is to also give it free will. Otherwise, is it life? Maybe in the biological approach, but surely not in essence of God.
Therefore, perfection is in the eye of the beholder. One has to make a distinction between a perfect circle and a perfect creation.
We are complete in the sense of life. We are the paragon of all things alive other then God. Our free will caused imperfection in
what could have been.
For us to become perfect, we must undo what has been done. This is practically an impossible task and that is why Jesus died for our sins.
It is not God abandoning us, or being cruel. He is having us choose for ourselves, just like at the beginning. Nothing has changed but reassurance and mercy.
2. Evolution teaches us 'survival of the fittest', where you survive by killing the weak and favouring the strong. Death and disease is everywhere. Our genes break down with age. How could a loving God make such a cruel world? This probably relates to the first argument: God made the world perfect, we cheesed him off, he's now abandoned us to our fate. He offers Jesus to those who can't stand this planet and want to get off. I also suspect this line of reasoning it what turns many Christians into atheists.
Evolution is simply an alternative, anti-Genesis approach to explaining life. It may as well be atheistic, as that is what lies at the bottom of it, but Christian Deists will never accept that- hence the Christian before the Deist.
Mankind as well as animals were never subject to Earth's conditions. Initially, we were directly in God's grace and there simply was no room for evolution. It was when we fell and were booted from Eden that we were at the mercy of Earthly conditions, subject to change and 'survival of the fittest'. Along with what I stated above, sin is a plague that does not choose who it inflicts. It simply inflicts, whether you are the Adversary or an apostle. It is our mission by God to master the knowledge of good and evil.
3. In order to prove Creationism true, God must have created the everything in such a specific way that any slight variation would cause it to go wrong. Whether or not they intend it this idea suggests variety is a bad thing. Things have to be done this way or else. It also suggests that living things are not independant of God, that they can't possibly do anything without him. Our relationship to Him is a clingy, parasitic one.
Even worse, if all things are guided by God does this mean he made people deformed / disabled / retarded on purpose? This doesn't seem to be the case, as Jesus healed people on many occasions.
This is simply not true. God created everything as we see it. He is the master artisan, and origin of everything. It is pro-evolution that suggests such a specific creation.
Sin is what causes deformities. If, from the beginning, man did not sin, there would be none of that. This is why the Old Covenant was harsh. Casting the ill out of society saved more lives and stopped more suffering from coming about, and it was sin that cause illness to begin with. Where people go wrong is thinking that being liberal and being righteous must co-exist.
That to, is our curse that sin inflicts, having to be hardened and yet loving all the same.
This is why Jesus is necessary. We are simply
inflicted.
This doom-and-gloom philosophy isn't central to Creationism, but seems to have been inferred by various individual creationists until it became the norm. If we were to travel back a few centures, when creationism was a genuinely valid theory, I doubt many of it's supporters would have agreed with them.
Not with how you portray it. People back then were practically Bible-slingers, not conforming to what scientific theory idealizes or your gloomy bias of the matter all the same.