Science!

Feb 3, 2017 1:17 AM

horseguacamole

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4653

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139

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21

That's a worm close up.

9 years ago | Likes 9 Dislikes 0

once again, this is not a bacterium

9 years ago | Likes 13 Dislikes 2

It's an animal

9 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Dinosaur bones were placed by the devil to test our faith! Buy my miracle handkerchief!

9 years ago | Likes 24 Dislikes 1

The great green arkleseizure would never do such a thing, he's is merely so large that the time it's take to move his great white 1/

9 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 1

Handkerchief is equivalent to billions of years, though it may only be seconds to him! Aachooo! Bless you!

9 years ago | Likes 4 Dislikes 0

I've been blessed by the Lord himself.

9 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

I have a solution to ur problems.

9 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

I have a solution to that problem.....Mongolians!

9 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

That's just crazy enough to work

9 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 0

It did! The great Wall of China failed like every single great wall in history be it for physical or political reasons

9 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Trump says no.

9 years ago | Likes 1 Dislikes 0

Isn't losing a binding site (the thing that makes antibiotic resistance) the opposite of evolution? The whole premise is based on 1/?

9 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 2

an organism developing new characteristics rather than losing old ones. Seems backwards. Not saying evolution didn't happen, this is 2/3

9 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 2

just a poor example. 3/3

9 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 1

I haven't studied science in a loooooong time; seemed legit to me.

9 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 0

No, gaining new charactersitics isn't needed. You just need change. Like black moths 'losing' their pigment to become white moths.

9 years ago | Likes 2 Dislikes 1

losing a trait is evolution. evolution = change in allele frequency in a population over time

9 years ago | Likes 6 Dislikes 1

evolution is not a constant march towards increasing complexity

9 years ago | Likes 5 Dislikes 0

Rather a giant violation of the second law of thermodynamics?

9 years ago | Likes 3 Dislikes 2