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Now, I had been under an impression that, according to Darwinists, the earliest ancestors of humans were some sort of one-celled, pond-scum animalcules they claim lived billions of years ago. But it has now occurred to me that at least some, professional Darwin-cheerleaders at the Smithsonian reject (out of the other side of their mouth) that asinine, false claim:
There you have it, from Darwinists' own propaganda mill, that the earliest ancestors of humans had bones, skeletons, and thus were not single-celled organisms. They are admitting that "one of the most important discoveries of the past century" is (what rationally-thinking people have already known for thousands of years prior to the past century) that the earliest ancestors of humans "looked and moved" not as single-celled organisms, but rather, as creatures equipped with skeletal systems. Not only that, but, therein (by their erroneous "4.4 million years ago" figure) you also have Darwinists admitting that no ancestors of humans -- not even the earliest ones -- lived billions of years ago.White and his colleagues assembled it to mark the place where they first found traces, in 1994, of “Ardi,” a female who lived 4.4 million years ago. Her skeleton has been described as one of the most important discoveries of the past century, and she is changing basic ideas about how our earliest ancestors looked and moved.
The Human Family's Earliest AncestorsStudies of hominid fossils, like 4.4-million-year-old "Ardi," are changing ideas about human origins
www.smithsonianmag.com
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