I would be slow to call those creationists liars.
In PHYLOGENETICS: Theory and Practice of Phylogenetic Systematics, Second Edition, E. O. WILEY and BRUCE S. LIEBERMAN, page 11, they write: “Empirically, a genealogy proposed by a phylogeneticist is a graphic representation of a hypothesis of the descent relationships of one or more organisms from one or more ancestors.”
The phrase “a graphic representation of a hypothesis” is used in various forms throughout the book, and creationists jumped on the repeated use of the phrase.
You can get the PDF version at
http://www.nylxs.com/docs/Phylogenetics Theory and Practice of Phylogenetic Systematics.pdf
Creationists have their agenda, and even though I would consider myself a creationist, I think they often go a little far. Wiley is not dismissing the phylogenetic theory in any way, but the book makes it clear that it must be used correctly and has a long way to go to become definitive.
I know very little about biology. Most of my studies were in other scientific fields. However, I know how academia works. If you don’t fully embrace the current theories, you don’t get into graduate studies. So evolutionists also have an agenda. Therefore, you don’t have free thinking on either side to the point that peer review means anything. Overlap and actual communication doesn’t happen between them. Anyway, I’m skeptical whenever a single idea is promoted without competing testing.
My posts have not been to defend creationism, since it would probably not have any positive effect. My main point is to get some of the posters to see that saying macro-evolution is fact, when it is still an elegant theory, doesn’t hold water. Maybe it will someday, but I don’t believe it is there yet.