I asked MK to reference these statements:
on a semantic level I only asked him questions about what
he brought up. Nevertheless I'm glad that this is out of the creationist subforum. MK responded on that thread with this: (I had to peek to remember what I asked him to reference

)
Comparing 231 orthologous genes on the chromosomes, Watanabe et al. [1] found 179 cases in which the human and chimpanzee protein-coding sequences were of equal lengths. Of these, approximately 80% have at least one amino-acid difference between the two species, leading to an average amino-acid divergence of 0.82%. Interestingly, of the remaining 52 orthologs, 15 were found to have indels within their coding sequences and 32 were found to have changes in the first ATG (start codon) or the stop codon, changes that would potentially lead to gross structural differences between the human and chimpanzee protein products. Given that fewer than 54% of human-mouse orthologs have coding sequences of different lengths [5], it seems rather surprising that as many as 20% have changed between humans and chimpanzees, despite the significantly shorter time since their divergence. Watanabe et al. [1] hypothesized that indels and structural changes may represent one of the major mechanisms of proteome evolution in the higher primates.
All that this excerpt is saying is that of 231 orthologous genes:
179 are of equal length
15 have indels in coding sequences
32 have alterations in start or stop codons.
Did you miss this part:
"...it seems rather surprising that as many as 20% have changed between humans and chimpanzees, despite the significantly shorter time since their divergence."
Like they said, the differences are in the eye of the beholder. So we have 83% of the protein coding genes in Chromosome 21 that diverge, on average, by a single codon in the respective genomes. That sounds fine until you realize that 20% of the protein coding genes have gross structural differences.
The most conserved region was at about the 12.5-Mb region (0.87%, over 100 kb), corresponding to the distal boundary region of the gene desert. Notably, no protein-coding genes have been identified in this highly conserved region...
...Taken together, gross structural changes affecting gene products are far more common than previously estimated (20.3% of the PTR22 proteins, as listed in Supplementary Tables 4 and 5).
DNA sequence and comparative analysis of chimpanzee chromosome 22
, Nature 27 May 2004
The most highly conserved region had no genes and gross structural changes are 20%. This has come to be one of those ironies for me, the noncoding region being more conserved then the coding region.
Can you honestly say that this makes perfect sense to you or that this does not come as a big supprise? The researchers are certainly supprised when asked what they think of this.
Sakaki said their analysis found about 68,000 insertions or deletions. "That is almost one insertion/deletion every 470 bases," he said. In addition, a small proportion of genes showed a relatively higher rate of evolution than most other genes. "We haven't known what proportion of the genes shows adaptive evolution. This study shows it to be about 2 to 3%," he said.
Early molecular comparisons between humans and chimpanzees suggested that the species are very similar to each other at the nucleotide sequence levela difference of between 1.23% and 5%, Sakaki said. The results reported this week showed that "83% of the genes have changed between the human and the chimpanzeeonly 17% are identicalso that means that the impression that comes from the 1.2% [sequence] difference is [misleading]. In the case of protein structures, it has a big effect," Sakaki said.(Chimps are not like humans, The Scientist 2004)
I have no idea what MK is trying to say by "Gross structural indels occur within reading frames and yet the reading frames are virtually all still functional." - the reason most of the genes are functional and reasonably identical is precisely because they don't have indels. The ones that have indels have altered reading frames, and the ones that don't, don't (besides start/stop alterations).
I can only conclude that you are not looking at the differences. There are dramatic differences in the protein coding genes as shown above and in regulatory genes as seen below:
You don't have to take my word for anything, it's in the scientific literature if you want to know what the problem is.
בּרא
And again, "There is also a real problem with what kind of indels are represented. Most of the human sequence would have had to result from deletions in the hominid line, this makes absolutely no sense at all." This is also meaningless. An indel is called an "insertion/deletion" precisely because it cannot be determined to be one or the other without a proper outgroup comparison, which doesn't seem to have been commented on in this extract.
It makes no sense because there is no demonstrated or directly observed genetic mechansim that can account for the anatomical and genetic differences.
One of my biggest problems with TEs is that they are apologists for evolution with no skeptical views on ape/human common ancestry. I don't really mind so much if you come to that conclusion but to ask none of the hard questions makes it hard to take seriously.