What testing??? Show me any testing ever done on the fossil of any dinosaur bone? You won't, because they believed it was as impossible for carbon to exist as they did for soft tissue to exist - based upon pre-conceived beliefs about the age of the fossils.
Supposedly we can't rely on those tests with sea life because they were in water - can't rely on it to date sedimentary rock because it was formed in water - can't use it to test any fossil because they were all buried through sedimentary actions in water - so can't date actual fossils or fossil bearing rock at all. So exactly what test are you relying on to make the claim that those bones were millions of years old? Your "pre-conceived belief" that they are?
That's your claim - not mine. I claim no conspiracy. Just the pre-conceived beliefs of fallible humans being inserted into the evidence.
You could at least get the facts correct. He was fired after presenting a paper which simply surmised that the finding of soft tissue may call into question the age of those fossils. Here is the paper, find the creationist claim? All he did is "prove" that it is indeed soft tissue that has been found - and no excuses needed for claiming "unknown polymers" through "unknown processes" as an excuse.
http://www.creationmoments.com/sites/creationmoments.com/files/pdf/Armitage_Triceratops_final.pdf
What - an unknown polymer through an unknown process?
Schweitzer’s article says that the soft tissues were subjected to several cycles of dehydration/rehydration—without losing their elasticity! So they appear to have been elastic (soft and stretchy, not hard and brittle) in both the dry and wet state.
Hmmm … it seems that on the one hand, we’re told that they are very resistant to breakdown, presumably an argument being used to support the fact that they’ve been preserved. Then we’re told that they are not preserved, i.e. ‘not the original blood vessels’. So why the argument as to their toughness?
(It reminds me of the letter to the editor of an Australian newspaper many years ago. The writer had just been given the spiel at a national park about the long ages assigned to indigenous rock art. He said something like: ‘I’ve just bought a can of the best house paint around, and I’m told if I’m lucky, it’ll last 15 years. Yet I’m shown where some Aboriginal has blown some soggy ochre onto a rock and I’m told it’s lasted 40,000 years. Where can I get a can of that stuff?’)
I'm just wondering where I can get a can of the stuff you are peddling?