Huh??? I have told you that what you have sought to demonstrate so far is merely micro evolution.
The prefix "micro-" is unnecessary and inaccurate. I have been describing evolution. Furthermore, I have been describing evolution that results in speciation or reproductive isolation of a population from its ancestor. When scientists do use a prefix, they use "macro-" to apply to evolution with speciation.
What I have been describing applies to evolution at all scales of time and change. Scientists don't stop calling evolution "evolution" just because no new species is a current result. They don't feel it is necessary or accurate to call evolution within a species by what precedes (variation) or follows (adaptation) the process of evolution in a species.
Variation is not evolution. Variation is a necessary pre-requisite to evolution. Adaptation is not evolution. It is a consequence of natural selection, a mechanism of evolution.
Evolution is selecting an adaptive variation and favoring its reproduction so that it appears more and more frequently in the population.
Scientists do distinguish between evolution within a species (as above) and evolution in which two sub-populations diverge to the extent that reproductive isolation occurs and the two groups which once formed a single gene pool are now two gene pools closed to each other. "micro-"evolution refers to the process within the species. "macro-" evolution refers to the identical process when it produces speciation.
With the exception of reproductive isolation, there is no difference in the results, and there is no difference at all in the process.
This is how ALL evolution occurs including the evolution of humans and chimpanzees from a common primate ancestor. No other or additional process is necessary.
If you want to call a group that has (in most cases artificially) been bred and selected, a new species, that's fine with me.
Actually, most artificial breeds are not new species, although there have been experiments in which reproductive isolation has resulted (with concurrent genetic change).
Most documented speciations have occurred in nature without artificial assistance.
What I challenge however, is macro evolution. Where one species becomes a entirely and completely different one, with different and more genetic information.
Depends on what you mean by "entirely and completely different" species. Evolution does not take any new population out of the genus in which its parent was found. Since we already have a genus of roses, any new species of rose will still be part of that genus. It won't suddenly pop up in a different genus or family, much less a different class and order.
Expecting a new species to be so different from its parent that it belongs in a completely different classification is like expecting a child to be a direct descendant of its uncle instead of its father. Doesn't happen.
That would truly be the theory of the origin of new species....
No, it wouldn't truly be the theory of the origin of new species.
It is not the theory Darwin first proposed. It is not the modern theory as it was developed in the 1930s-40s. It is not the theory that is agreed on by biologists today.
It is a strawman caricature of what is truly the theory of the origin of species (aka evolution).
So you can claim all you like that what you describe doesn't happen. I agree it doesn't happen. Because what you are attempting to describe is not how evolution is described by those who work in biology.
If you want to claim evolution (including speciation and common descent) doesn't happen, you will first need to understand what evolution is.
Or, if you prefer, you can keep barking up the wrong tree.