• Randomness can’t even build a bobsled—ditto for natural selection. Time, matter, and chance can’t make a single living cell. Unguided randomness will always result in devolution and degradation. Randomness would also result in the rapid loss of genetic information. Random mutations and natural selection would make evolution self-limiting. 
  • A life that arises from an unguided, blind process can never happen. Life requires too much information.
  • The Universe demonstrates immense specified complexity. Complex and specified patterns are everywhere in nature.
  • All life forms on earth evolved out of primeval slime is a fairy tale.
  • Cytoplasmic Dynein and Kinesin Power Axonal Transport Schematic diagram... | Download Scientific Diagram
  •  Kinesins are microtubule-based motor proteins that are involved in cargo transport and mitosis.
  •  Kinesins are microtubule-based motor proteins that are involved in cargo transport and mitosis.
  • Kinesin engines are walking robots on their microtubule tracks. They are one ten-thousandth the diameter of a human hair. When kinesin-5 pauses at the end of a microtubule, it then pushes out to allow the motor to grow the microtubules.
  • Molecular Expressions Cell Biology: Ribosomes
  • The ribosome is a complex molecule made of ribosomal RNA molecules and proteins that form a factory for protein synthesis in cells. Ribosomes use cellular accessory proteins, soluble transfer RNAs, and metabolic energy to initiate, elongate, and terminate peptide synthesis. The ribosome is responsible for synthesizing proteins by translating the genetic code transcribed in mRNA into an amino acid sequence. The translating ribosome is a molecular conveying machine.
  • Ribosomes are protein-making factories. These tiny factories must be constructed before they can put proteins together. Proteins are assigned specific jobs to accomplish.
  • Cells control the timing and speed of important cellar events.
  • Transposons: Your DNA that's on the go - Science in the News
  • Jumping genes are protein factories with wheels. Ribosomes are the molecular factories that produce all the proteins a cell needs to grow and function.
  • These programmed machines work in unison. There are 3,500 of these factories on wheels in the human genome. The nuclear membrane is more than just a protective bubble around the nuclear material. It is also a repair station. At the membrane’s inner wall, a trio of proteins does the necessary mending with the correct chromosomes.
  • The two types of chromatin, heterochromatin and euchromatin, are distinct regions of the genome. Heterochromatin is densely packed and inaccessible to transcription factors, so it is transcriptionally silent. The heterochromatin part of the genome is composed of repetitive elements that we had categorized as junk DNA. They are a series of DNA repair machinery that do simple and complex DNA repairs. The DNA is tightly packed in loops within the nucleus of a cell. What looks like a jumble of rubber bands and twisty ties is the ribosome, the cellular protein factory. The ribosome is made up of proteins and strands of RNA, a chemical relative of DNA. It has two interlocked parts that behave as a single molecular machine to assemble all of the cell’s protein molecules.
  • Unguided natural law does not produce machinery, factories, or quality control. The Event Originator coded the necessary information into the blueprint of life. The Event Originator’s software programs put in the requisite life information and correctly flowed that information. Shining sunlight on a clump of disorderly mass and then waiting for the natural laws to turn out life is a pipe dream. Intelligence is the first cause behind atoms that become kinesins, ribosomes, and circadian clock proteins.
  • A life that arises from an unguided, blind process can never happen. Life requires too much information.
  • All things are triune, with binary interactives.
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