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This is a response to PPSimmons' video, "OOPS! Even MORE Evidence for Intelligent Design!".
So, Carl, it's been a long time, and while they say that absence makes the heart grow
fonder, I'm afraid that in your case that particular aphorism has been found somewhat
wanting. As you might be aware, my last video was addressed
at your odious lickspittle, Mike "Pisspants" Shoesmith, and that repulsive skid-mark on
the face of Christianity, Richard "Cockshite" Garcia. You may also have heard that while
I was rogering them roughly with their own stupidity I did admit to having grown weary
of the Sisyphean task of shoveling you and your fellow thought-averse bumpkins' malodorous
thought processes up a seemingly endless hill. Thus when your toadies somewhat predictably
decided to ignore my perfectly reasonable counter to the conditions of their "debate
challenge", and instead tucked their tails between their legs and fucked off as expeditiously
as possible, I was afforded the opportunity to take a well-earned sabbatical from creationist
rectal stuffing, put my feet up, and recharge my batteries.
Having done so, the time has now come to pull on my wellies again, roll up my sleeves, and
step once more unto the breach -- although it's likely that in the future the frequency
of my ignoramus reamage will probably be considerably reduced. To mark this occasion, it therefore
seemed most fitting that I select as a target, from the unending flotsam-strewn strand that
is creationist dumb-fuckery, a turd that had been jettisoned by the SS Carl Bollox herself.
So imagine my delight as I strolled along that fetid shore and came across a this wonderful
nugget you'd taken the time to anally express, and that splatted dab-smack in the middle
of my area of expertise, that is -- protein chemistry.
As usual, though, it seems that you and the terminally confused simians at the PPSimmons
channel were unable to come up with anything to say for yourselves, and instead resorted
to dredging up a noxious screed by a Mr. Brian Thomas from the Institute of Creation Research
-- one that was originally excreted almost two years ago -- thereby demonstrating how
close you and your spunk-monkeys are to the cutting edge of "creation research".
So without further ado, Carl, let's get back into the swing. I'd like to ask my subscribers
to reach for the nearest waterproof receptacle, and you to assume the usual position, as I
play the first clip. "The article explains, according to evolutionary
theory chemicals must have somehow organized themselves into cellular life, presumably
billions of years ago, and that means that enzymes must have formed themselves too."
As you and Mr. Thomas are well aware, Carl, the formation of the first replicating polymers
and primitive cellular systems is the bailiwick of a field of study named abiogenesis. I know
you know this because I've previously taken the time to insert this particular threadbare
canard, beak-first, up your back-passage, while I contend that Mr. Thomas must have
come across this tidbit at least once during his biological studies, unless of course he
was too busy condemning people in the name of Jesus to have paid any attention in class.
Regardless of whether or not the appearance of the first primitive life forms occurred
via the action of natural processes or at the whim of an inscrutable cosmic enchanter,
the fact remains that an insurmountable edifice of empirical evidence indicates that it occurred
almost four-billion years ago and was followed by continuous diversification ever since via
an elegant bifurcating process of imperfect reproduction and natural selection.
In either case, Carl, this same evidence fucks up the arse the cherished fables you and Mr.
Thomas cling to like scared children at the back of the short bus, and your repeated and
repugnant dishonesty in trying to paint established science with the uncertainties inherent in
emerging science is both deplorably shameful and a testament to how desperate you are,
and how low you'll stoop to attempt to buoy your inexorably sinking belief system.
"Enzymes, though, appear to be highly engineered, miniaturized machines. Heh. Even intelligent
human scientists, armed with the most sophisticated technology, have never been able to reproduce
the design and manufacture of a single enzyme. So, logically, neither can unintelligent chemicals,
or the laws that govern them, manufacture themselves."
What a crock of shit, Carl. I have to admit, though, to being somewhat impressed at the
depths of stupidity and ignorance that you and Mr. Thomas have plunged to with this segment.
In fact, if you try just a little harder you might well manage to disappear up each other's
arses. Firstly I'll point out your egregious non-sequitur
because I was amused by your use of the word "logically", when in fact it's evident that
you and Mr. Thomas wouldn't know what logic was if Mr. Spock himself strapped it on and
used it to vigorously shag seven shades of shit out of you. Because it seems that by
your own reasoning I could equally legitimately argue that our inability, as a sapient species,
to produce a delectable pair of mam-a-licious honkers using a bag of balloons and a packet
of Jell-O must therefore mean that they also cannot be produced by unintelligent cells,
and that therefore all humungous whumba-jumbas are the result of the jug-related ju-ju of
an invisible pervert in the sky. Of course your logic also fails because of
the question you're begging harder than an evangelist with an empty collection plate
and an large unpaid hooker's bill. That is, of course, your unwarranted assumption that
intelligence is an absolute requirement for the generation of protein complexity, while
completely ignoring that we have no a priori reason to make that assumption and a mountain
of a posteriori knowledge indicating that's it's just a pile steaming poo.
But pretzel logic aside, Carl, your and Mr. Thomas' argument fails even harder than an
abstinence only program because he appears to be unaware that directed in vitro protein
evolution is an established and successful area of research, to such a degree that companies
are producing patents, selling kits and even offering contract services in this area. The
fact that Mr. Thomas appears oblivious to all this speaks volumes to either his abject
ineptitude in the field on which he has chosen to defecate, or his unfortunate cerebral impairment,
or to the magnitude of the lies he's willing to tell to defend your impotent god. Of course
he is a creationist, so all three may well apply.
Not only did Mr. Thomas ignore a vast swathe of research as though it doesn't exist, but
this intensive work which, incidentally, was carried out by highly intelligent and educated
individuals dedicated to the discovery of new knowledge, and not by arrogant, worthless
wank-stains dedicated to destroying it, has culminated in the production of novel enzyme
activities from previously non-functional sequences.
Thus not only is Mr. Thomas demonstrably wrong on this point of fact, it so happens that
these feats of protein engineering were achieved by the very same processes of random mutagenesis
and functional selection that he asserts could not possibly produce them. This, coupled to
his eagerness to jump into this ill-considered line of argumentation as eagerly as a priest
volunteering to conduct a public louse inspection after choir practice has, unfortunately for
both of you, done nothing but ream your own god vigorously up his celestial bunghole.
You see, Carl, with the evidence I've presented in hand, and the evidence of the sudden poofing-into-existence
of functional enzymes out of nothing distinctly not in hand, our observations of the real
world tell us that the only known way enzymes are formed is via a mixture of stochastic
and targeted naturalistic processes and not by the methodical design and manufacture by
intelligent agents, be they transcendental or otherwise. Thus it seems that the score
that indicates enzymes were formed naturally has increased by one, while the score for
them having been created capriciously by the judicious use of pixie dust remains what it's
always been -- that is, absolutely bugger all.
"The title of a recent scientific report asserted that a particular enzyme evolved. It was in
Nature magazine. The title of the report was 'Evolution of a New Enzyme'. The study results,
however, clearly demonstrate that this enzyme could not have evolved and was purposefully
created." I felt the need to comment here because Nature
is arguably the world's most prestigious journal and publishes research from the very cutting
edge of all aspects of science. It's therefore mind-boggling to see that Mr. Thomas apparently
feels that his Masters degree and utter lack of research experience has equipped him to
publically defecate over its contents. While I've been labeled as arrogant on a number
of occasions for opining on areas in which I have been extensively educated, at least
I possess sufficient humility to restrict my bloviation to such areas. One can only
begin to imagine the enormity of the bloated and self-satisfied ego that gives a mediocre
simpleton like Mr. Thomas the temerity to feel that he knows better than those who have
proved themselves where he most definitely has not, and whose buttock sweat he's unfit
to mop-up with his tongue. Now of course, lack of training and qualifications
does not per se mean that his arguments are erroneous, and it may be that Mr. Thomas is
an unsung extraordinary genius possessed with insights that have somehow escaped the authors
of this paper, who have dedicated their lives to studying this particular specialized field
of science, not to mention the similarly expert reviewers that accepted the manuscript.
However, based on what I've already presented, I would posit that this possibility is somewhat
remote, and furthermore I will, in due course, be providing additional demonstrable evidence
he is, in fact, nothing of the sort, but rather a jumped up little fucktard with delusions
of his own competence. "The investigators compared the three-dimensional
structures of similarly shaped enzymes that are found in different species of bacteria.
The studies confirmed that the core structure of the CS2 hydrolase, like that of similar
enzymes, is critical. The scientists wrote in Nature, quote: 'Any change in this area
of the enzyme adversely affected protein activity.' On the one hand, evolution's story requires
that at some point in time something altered what would become the enzyme core. And not
only once, but again and again as each structural piece evolved into place over eons of time.
On the other hand science observably demonstrates that altering the enzyme core in the slightest
way is impossible without making the whole structure useless."
Any biochemistry undergraduate knows that mutations at or near an active site are much
more likely to be deleterious than those at the enzyme periphery, where structural changes
are less likely to propagate into alterations in active site geometry. Furthermore, most
changes to residues involved in the actual catalytic mechanism, or ones that sterically
interfere with substrate accessibility, are also more likely to be deleterious. Unfortunately
for you Carl, Mr. Thomas has yet to demonstrate that he has more than an undergraduate level
understanding of this subject, and in fact from what he's demonstrated so far it appears
he's operating at, or below, an "F". You'll notice that I used the word "most"
when I mentioned active site mutations, whereas your Muppet used the somewhat more ambitious
(and as it turns out entirely unwarranted) word, "all". You see, Carl, if Mr. Thomas
had paid more attention in class, or perhaps attended some more prestigious institutions
than the Texas backwaters he's familiar with, he might have discovered that a whole multi-billion-dollar
industry has arisen around the production of industrial enzymes with artificially enhanced
activity, stability or selectivity. Since I've had the benefit of an education
that he's unfortunately apparently been deprived of, I was aware of this fact, but rather than
citing work that could easily fill a library I'll instead give you this excellent review
that provides over 50 examples of such improvements. And while not all of these mutations are to
the active site, it look me less than a minute to find this example of a 50% increase in
the specificity of protease BYA via an active site mutation. Thus Mr. Thomas' claim that
evolution by stepwise improvements in the active site is impossible is immediately rendered
as impotent as an apologist hooked up to a lie detector, and can be summarily rammed
up his jacksie by anyone who cares to do so. Furthermore, Mr. Thomas is also operating
under the same cognitive dysfunction as most of his fellow creationists, who apparently
cannot conceive of the concept that early enzymes were most likely nowhere near as efficient
as their descendants. Early enzymes therefore explored a much flatter fitness landscape
as they evolved, and had many more favorable mutations available to them than to their
much more specialized modern counterparts. Thus when Mr. Thomas delightedly proclaims
that active site mutations cannot have resulted in evolution in early enzymes because they
are generally detrimental in extant ones, he is committing an egregious category error
and might as well be comparing Kate Moss' tits with Pamela Anderson's. Of course the
average creationist, and Mr. Thomas is rapidly proving himself to be very average, wouldn't
recognize a logical fallacy even it kicked him repeatedly in the balls with a steel-tipped
winkle-picker, so perhaps I shouldn't be surprised that this eluded him -- or you, for that matter,
Carl. Now, getting back to the paper in question
here, what Mr. Thomas has neglected to mention is that only five active site mutations were
generated by the authors and that in reality, both real evolutionary processes and human
protein engineers explore vast fitness landscapes by generating millions of mutants to produce
the rare changes that improve activity. Perhaps even more egregiously, Mr. Thomas also fails
to point out that three other mutations generated by the group actually doubled the enzyme's
efficiency, and while these weren't in the active site it does seem that revealing their
existence would have compromised the story he was so assiduously peddling.
With this kind of selective data mining, therefore, I would suggest that everyone ask themselves
whether these are the actions of an individual truly engaging in an honest and unbiased assessment
of a piece of scientific research, or those of a despicably dishonest and vile streak
of shit who's interested only in pushing his own agenda harder than a pedophile with a
puppy in a playground. "The researchers found a clue in the DNA that
suggested to them an idea as to how the enzyme could have evolved. They said the DNA that
codes for certain structures within the CS2 hydrolase gene could have, quote, 'jumped'
from another bacteria to this one. Perhaps some unknown cellular mechanism, quote, 'stitched
it in' -- this little extra bit -- at just the right place among the bacteria's 1.8 million
DNA bases. Heh." This "unknown mechanism", as he refers to
it, is called transposition and it won Barbara McClintock a Nobel Prize 1983. Again, Mr.
Thomas might have been aware of this had he had been listening to his lecturers during
class rather than to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir on his fucking iPod. Of course, it's
equally possible that Mr. Thomas is lying like a Catholic in a confessional again, or
that he didn't even read the paper he's violating, because the authors clearly state that the
CS2 hydrolase gene is in fact sandwiched by transposable elements.
As to why Mr. Thomas places so much emphasis on its exact genomic location, I am at a loss,
since it appears that the authors didn't think it to be important enough to mention it at
all. I wonder whether he decided to fish this out, whole cloth, from between his buttocks
in order to falsely inflate his claim that the existence of anything more complex than
his thought processes necessitates the existence of his particular ephemeral Djinn? And even
if the insertion site were significant, I think we can safely wager than it would not
have occurred to Mr. Thomas that this could be achieved as effectively by millions of
random insertion events followed by selection of the appropriate lineage using mundane physical
process that have been repeatedly observed and verified, as it could once by the use
of a mystic incantation that has never been observed by anybody.
"But if that fairy tale story is so, could this process properly be called 'evolution'?
Well of course not. If the gene jumped from another bacteria to this one, then it did
not evolve because it already existed somewhere else."
Well, Carl, it seems that Mr. Thomas hasn't yet come up with that insight that would save
him from being labeled an irredeemable simpleton. Did he completely forget about figure 1 in
the paper, a cladograms that occupies the best part of a page and shows how the CS2
hydrolase is related to modern beta-carbonic anhydrases and so evolved from a common ancestor?
Apparently he did, along with the extensive discussion on this topic in the paper. The
possibility that CS2 hydrolase in this species may have been acquired by horizontal gene
transfer doesn't mean that it magically materialized at the behest of his cosmic tinkerer, just
that it evolved elsewhere as demonstrated by the essentially conclusive phylogenetic
evidence. Interestingly the paper notes that only some
species of order Sulfolobales contain the CS2 hydrolase activity and how this is elegantly
explained by its evolution elsewhere and its subsequent transfer into only some members
of that clade. This is yet another a striking example of the explanatory power of science
in general and evolutionary biology specifically, an example that Mr. Thomas conveniently neglected
to mention in his hatchet-job, and which I suspect he would have trouble explaining without
arbitrarily referring to the whims and vagaries of an emotionally stunted, pan-dimensional
space wizard. "But in order for a lateral gene transfer
to even work, in addition to the enzymes themselves, another mechanism had to already exist that
could recognize, accept and insert the foreign DNA at just the right place. Only then could
it retrofit an enzyme in just the right way to enable the bacterium to live on sulfur."
Jumping back to yet another unsubstantiated claim of irreducible complexity, eh Carl?
How very predictable of you 'tards. Of course this game could go on ad infinitum, because
it's childishly simple for even indomitable cretins like you pick any complex biological
process and assert out of your seemingly endless ignorance that it could not possibly have
evolved, while it takes a considerable amount of time and effort for someone with intellectual
integrity to research the field and produce a considered and well-reference rebuttal to
your cranial flatulence. Since I don't have an infinite amount of time at my disposal
to chase after this particular white rabbit, and since I think I've demonstrated that anything
that Mr. Thomas excretes should be taken with a kilogram of salt, I think we'll move on
to the next clip. "Where's the evidence here for evolutionary
innovation? Pre-existing DNA, and pre-existing DNA transfer, and pre-existing splicing programs
appear to have existed from the beginning. The authors of the article asserted that CS2
hydrolase, quote, 'emerged owing to the evolution of a new protein structure',end quote. But
this statement ignores the fact that no new DNA actually emerged."
Once again, Carl, either Mr. Thomas didn't read the paper, is as monumentally stupid
as you are, or is a lying splat of syphilitic jizz who fished this piss-poor excuse for
a thought out of the same place that you get all your videos.
I'm going to ignore the mind-numbing inanity of you and Mr. Thomas apparently thinking
that the acquisition of a new gene and thus a concomitant new and significant physiological
function by an organism somehow doesn't count as an evolutionary innovation, presumably
because said organism "is still a bacterium" and not a fucking frog. Instead I'll re-iterate
what I said earlier. The authors of the paper clearly describe
how CS2 hydrolase is phylogenetically related to, and so "emerged" from, an ancestral carbonic
anhydrase, and how it differs from that enzyme due to its ability to form a hexadecameric
catenane quaternary structure, and also due the presence of a characteristic double phenylalanine
motif near its active site that explains its differing substrate specificity. Just because
Mr. Thomas decided to ignore these somewhat salient points and instead pontificate on
a veritable shoal of red herrings that he pulled effortlessly from the recesses of his
lower digestive tract, and just because you were too lazy, uninterested or stupid to fact-check
him, Carl, doesn't mean that they were not made. In fact, it seems rather telling that
Mr. Thomas chose this subterfuge rather than thinking of refutations for what was actually
presented, suggesting perhaps that he was unable to furnish any such refutations and
instead decided to bypass his inconvenient clash with reality by lying like a Wall Street
banker to a congressional sub-committee. "And the proper placement of the so-called
'transfer DNA', required just the opposite of evolution. It required intelligent, purposeful
design." Carl, had you bothered to spend the time to
read the actual Nature paper itself, instead of uncritically swallowing Mr. Thomas' excrement
and then throwing it all up indiscriminately all over your channel, you would have realized
that the "proper placement" he mentioned is nothing but a figment of his fevered imagination.
Of course, I expect nothing less from you Carl, because you're an ignorant buffoon with
absolutely no interest in discovering whether you're right or wrong, and with no respect
for the gifts that have been bestowed upon you by the very people you smugly besmirch
with every video you make. People who you feel, in the apparently limitless depths of
your conceit, to be your inferiors, and yet who -- to anyone even remotely plugged into
reality -- obviously have minds that can be compared to finely tuned, turbocharged Lamborghinis
when compared to yours, which is evidently more akin to a clapped out old golf cart with
a dead battery, flat tire and a stale piss-stain on the driver's seat.
It's because of this that I make no effort to reach you or your kind, Carl, because you've
proved time and time again that you don't care one jot for things like reason and beauty
and truth -- you're only interested in perpetuating your own beliefs. Beliefs that you cannot
and will not question, because they've been handed down to you over hundreds of generations
from primitive people who knew nothing of the natural world and so tried their best
to explain it with the only tool they had available to them -- their imaginations.
And because of this I actually feel a little sorry for you Carl, because you and your fellow
creationists are now forced to spend your days holding up a damn that's creaking and
groaning against the unstoppable and ever-growing waters of knowledge that science is producing
-- a damn that threatens every day to finally burst from the unbearable strain and consume
you in the resulting torrent, sweeping you and your like away into the annals of history
to be looked at and laughed at by generations to come as nothing more than strange and inscrutable
curiosities. Your inflexibility and dour insistence on
looking back at the past rather than forward to the future has left you worshiping a woefully
small and stunted god -- a god of limited vision and simplistic motivations, a pitiful
god that grows smaller everyday just as we grow more enlightened.
And yet it needn't be so, Carl. Instead you could be like the countless enlightened theists
the world over, Christians included, who have opened their eyes to the grandeur of this
reality. Who have gazed at the Comsos in wonder and realized that their god is so much more
magnificent that their ancestors could ever have imagined. They worship a god that created
an unfathomably vast Universe that has coalesced slowly over billions of years from nothing
but pure energy, to one that is the home of exquisite galaxies teeming with stars around
which silently move planets containing wonders as yet unimagined and unimaginable. They worship
a god that created at least one place, and possibly many, many more, where life could
grasp a first tentative foothold, a god that put into motion an exquisitely simple yet
elegant set of rules that allowed it to diversify over countless millennia to produce an ever-changing
kaleidoscope of wonder of beauty. A kaleidoscope that continues to slowly turn to this day
and from which endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being
evolved. But instead of grasping eagerly at this new
vision of reality, Carl -- a vision, hard won, that's been carved out of the granite
of our ignorance by those you choose to slander and defame at every opportunity -- instead
of embracing it and all the positive implications it has about the god you claim to worship,
you and you kind choose to demean that god by labeling it as a petty conjurer that creates
using mud and tawdry parlor tricks. As you know I'm not a religious man, Carl, but if
it happened that we lived in a Universe where both of these gods existed, I know which one
I'd be worshiping.