"It would be fascinating if Creationists had scientific evidence to support their ideas... but they are never able present it."
Wait...don't you say that anti-Creationists such as yourself have "evidence to support" your anti-Creationism?
Creationists affirm the proposition that God created man, whereas anti-Creationists affirm the proposition that God did not create man, no? Now, this pair of propositions—
P: God created man
~P: God did not create man
—is a pair of
contradictories, which means that one of them must be true and one of them must be false. Do not anti-Creationists (such as Darwinists) say they have
"evidence to support" the proposition they like, namely
~P? And do not anti-Creationists affirm that
~P is true, and that
P is false?
So, the question is: Since you, being an anti-Creationist, claim that
~P is true, and claim that you have what you call
"evidence to support" ~P, why, then, would you go around complaining that Creationists "are never able to present" anything you would be willing to call
"evidence to support" P?
Here's what you're saying:
"It would be fascinating if Creationists had scientific evidence to support [a proposition I, being an anti-Creationist, consider to be false]... but they are never able present it."
Can evidence support propositions that are false? Yes or No?