Bob, I simply no longer see the point in defending ToE. Maybe it's complacency. But if you would like to debate ToE, it's probably a good idea to do so with someone as fanatical about the topic as you. It's not that the evidence is lacking, but that you disregard each and every point without serious consideration. You have already revealed in previous threads that you believe the Bible is correct, and that which stands opposed to the "truths" contained in the Bible is incorrect. Essentially, you know which evidence you will and won't accept before you even find out what it is. "Does it agree with the Bible? Great! Oh, it disagrees with the Bible? Must be wrong!" There is simply no point in having a discussion.
You seem to have a problem telling the difference between evidence and conclusions which people draw from the evidence. If you were clearer about this difference you would see that I don't reject evidence, but I frequently disagree with the conclusions which some evolutionists draw from such evidences.
As far as the Bible is concerned I did not conclude that macroevolution was wrong because it conflicted with the Bible, because frankly at the time that I rejected evolution I did not believe that Genesis was anything more than a fairytale.
No, my rejection of macroevolution was based on my training and experience in technical fields and my ability to examine people's technical ideas for flaws.
Macroevolution via random mutations (throwing away the failures) was once, before the discoveries about DNA, a fairly reasonable idea. With what was known 23 years ago about DNA and what was going on in cells I was able to see that the idea was not credible and so rejected it. I had expected at that time that a more credible mechanism would be forthcoming from the scientific community. This has not happened to date.
At the same time additional findings have been discovered over the intervening 23 years about what is going on in cells that make the challenge for a "naturalistic" mechanism "light years" more difficult, to the point where the concept is not only not credible, it is actually ridiculous. In my opinion most workers in the field probably recognize this, but like my initial reaction 23 years ago, feel that over time someone will be able to come up with a better and far more credible mechanism.
At this point in time, considering what has been learned about the amazing amount of organized information contained in the DNA of even the simplist lifeform known, the "random mutations" thing has got to be the biggest boo boo in the recent history (last 50 years) of evolutionary thought.
I will admit that I gave up on such "pie in the sky" many years ago and opted for a far simpler solution: multiple types of different creatures in the beginning, which coincidentally happens to roughly match what the simple story in Genesis relates.
It was tough for me to "eat crow" and admit that the "simple folk" had been right all along to believe in the Bible version of origins, but I finally had to face reality and admit that I had been wrong in believing that "10 million Frenchmen, i.e. scientists, couldn't possibly be wrong". They were and are. Tough. Face it.