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Depends on the genes. HOX genes are particularly consistent, seeing as they govern bilateral symmetry. There are most certainly genes that you have which are identical to ones seen in other species.
Which would fit with the idea that the Creator worked with templates which he tweaked for each new creation.
If you mean the alignment of the whole genome, of course none are a perfect match. It wouldn't make sense even for another human to have an identical genome to yourself unless you have an identical twin.
Alignment can prove a common designer working with code developed for less sophisticated life forms.
Proof isn't a thing in science, only in math, since proof demands that all other alternative explanations be absolutely eliminated, and one of the qualifications hypotheses and theories in science must meet is the capacity to be disproven.
So certainty is also not something that science provides. Your model could be wrong.
Also, analogy? It's not like there's a biological need for us to share so many genes with chimpanzees and other apes. Due to how redundant codons are, if I, as a designer, wanted to make it apparent that humans were specially created, I could make it such that no human genes properly aligned with any other genes of other creatures while still only using the 4 nucleotides used in everything else.
Unless you were working with templates developed for all life on earth which you then focused on the particular lifeform. The code shows that we are related to the rest of life on earth while being unique.
Of course, it all depends on what that change is. Changes as drastic as an entire chromosome being duplicated can still result in a viable organism (uncommon in mammals), yet a single base pair change can mean death. It all depends on what is impacted and how. The high mutation rate in our species is considered a contributing factor to our high miscarriage rate.
Which simply says that the integrity of the code lies in an intelligence far beyond our own and that a change in a single character can ruin everything.
Common creator, as you put it, isn't a theory. Claiming that your alternative interpretation of the data is equal is horrifically flawed, in that evolution actually predicted similarities in genomes long before those genomes were sequenced and verified the prediction. Creationism does not do this, you'll find no creationist predicting these genetic similarities prior to genomes actually being evaluated.
No creationist needs to do that since it was a purposeful decision that created the similarities and differences. One which no evolutionist could duplicate in practice. But if you look at a monkey and then at a human and then predict there are similarities in their genes have you told us anything we do not already know.
Nah, it just makes 0 sense for us to share so many viral remnants with chimpanzees without sharing ancestry. No rational designer would bother to make commonalities between non-coding regions, because they don't do anything and thus don't have to have any specified content. Especially not make some of them look like broken viral genes all inserted in the exact same places.
A common template, similar code adapting to common problems will produce an analogous mutation history since creation.
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