The only problem the similarities and as has been the case more and more no with the genetics it doesn't match the nice neat tree of common decent. There are creatures that are distant on the tree which share similar genetics and there are creature who are suppose to be linked on the tree with many difference. And as it has been said there are to many of these occurrences now to put it down to convergent evolution. Its more like the tree is a hedge indicating many roots being taken up. This is more in line with single creation of many different kinds and them growing parallel and having a small amount of evolution then all creatures being traced back to a common ancestor.
And yet, I find it curious that you discount the scientific explanation and claim that science has it wrong, and yet you are happy to use scientific information when it suits you to.
It is the science that is stating this.
Increasingly genome similarities in otherwise distant species, and genome differences in otherwise similar species were discovered. And while evolutionists sometimes tried to explain these uncooperative findings, the evolutionary histories they needed to construct became increasingly complex and circuitous. Today these uncooperative findings have become undeniable and in response evolutionists have all but dropped the common descent prediction, replacing it with a lineage-specific model where evolution is constantly creating new genome features, even between nearest neighbors on the evolutionary tree.
Phylogenetic incongruence is rampant in evolutionary studies. Conflicts exist at all levels of the evolutionary tree and throughout both morphological and molecular traits. This paper reports on incongruent gene trees in bats. That is one example of many. These incongruences are caused by just about every kind of contradiction possible. Molecular sequences in one or a few species may be out of place amongst similar species. Or sequences in distant species may be strangely similar. As one paper admitted, there is no known mechanism or function that would account for this level of conservation at the observed evolutionary distances. Or as another evolutionist admitted, the many examples of nearly identical molecular sequences of totally unrelated animals are astonishing.
http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/368/1632/20130021.full
We had expected to find identical changes in maybe a dozen or so genes but to see nearly 200 is incredible. We know natural selection is a potent driver of gene sequence evolution, but identifying so many examples where it produces nearly identical results in the genetic sequences of totally unrelated animals is astonishing.
Genetic similarities between bats and dolphins discovered -- ScienceDaily
However, recent studies have demonstrated that adaptive convergent sequence evolution can be detected in vertebrates using
statistical methods that model parallel evolution.
In other words not a tree in common decent but a hedge.
Genome-wide signatures of convergent evolution in echolocating mammals : Nature : Nature Publishing Group
Darwin's Tree of Life May Be More Like a Thicket
Darwin's Tree of Life May Be More Like a Thicket
In recent years, evolutionary biologists have increasingly used DNA sequences to construct evolutionary trees. Researchers find transposons particularly suitable for this endeavor. When evolutionary biologists propose evolutionary relationships, they rely on the principle that organisms with shared DNA sequences arise from a common ancestor. But other mechanisms exist that can introduce the identical DNA sequences. Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is one.
In other words gene are passed sideways and not down as would be with common decent and common ancestors. This also explains why we see similarities in distant creatures on the traditional tree and differences in creatures that are suppose to be closely related.
Reasons To Believe : Lost in a Masquerade: Horizontal Gene Transfer Impersonates Common Ancestry