>>13426952>I can clearly tell you when a color is red and when it isn'tPlease pinpoint the exact spot where red becomes orange
>Obviously, God wanted it that wayYou clearly have a learning disability. That is a complete non-argument.
>why humans and cats both get Type-1 Diabetes?All animals need to regulate their blood glucose levels and therefore each individual has the potential to develop defects in that homeostatic mechanism in contrast to the broader population, it is completely incomparable to all members of three closely related species all possessing the same mutation in the same gene loci.
>Some people are born with webbing between their feet, some people are born with a miniature tailSome people are born with mutations that prove advantageous and are passed on to future generations... There's a name for that, I think.
The human proto-tail is literally a vestigial trait; the human embryo develops gills, a tail and even a yolk-sac early in development before they disappear. These appendages are entirely useless to a human but are remnants of their evolutionary ancestors. Dolphins and Baleen whale fetuses also develop hind limbs before reabsorbing them.
There are countless examples of evolution that are easily observable in present day. Peppered moth colouration changes in industrialised areas; Galapagos finches' average beak size grew ~10% in the year following a drought in 1977; antibiotic resistant bacteria; pesticide resistant weeds; anticoagulant resistant rats; the diatom fossil record (which you conveniently ignored from my previous post); the London Underground Mosquito has already undergone speciation from the above-ground mosquito as cross-breeding does not produce viable eggs.
>I'll admit I am rather ignorant on specific genetics, I know very little about actual geneticsNo shit
>but a lot of the basic conepts of evolution perplex meyou haven't referenced a single accurate concept of evolution to be perplexed by.