Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Malaysia's first man in space


BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan (AP) — Russian spacecraft soared from the Kazakh steppe on Wednesday with a crew of three headed for the International Space Station, including Malaysia's first man in space and an American who is to be the first woman to command the orbital outpost.
The Soyuz-FG rocket lifted off on schedule, rising into a darkening sky over the Russian-operated Baikonur launch facility. It was topped by a spacecraft that is to deliver U.S. astronaut Peggy Whitson, veteran Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko and Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor, a Malaysian physician, to the space station Friday.


AUDIO: Hear the liftoff of the Soyuz rocket
Whitson, of Beaconsfield, Iowa, is making her second trip to the station and is to become its first female commander. Sheikh Muszaphar, a 35-year-old orthopedic surgeon, is to spend about 10 days on the station, performing experiments involving diseases and the effects of microgravity and space radiation on cells and genes.
Applause broke out among space officials and other onlookers after the Soyuz TMA-11 spacecraft shed its rocket stages and entered orbit. Sheikh Muszaphar's parents watched the liftoff from an observation area, praying and in tears.

Friday, September 07, 2007

Free Education in Malaysia

Budget 2008: Schooling will be totally free in Malaysia, says PM
Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi says the government will allow EPF contributors to make monthly withdrawals from Account 2 for the financing of one house from Jan 1.



The prime minister unveiled a generous Budget 2008 yesterday that will bring cheer to the man in the street as well as the business sector.

Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, tabling the budget in parliament, announced free education and textbooks for all school-goers starting from next year’s session.

He also floated a RM9.6 billion measure to enable millions of Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) contributors to draw on their savings to reduce their housing loan repayments.

With free education, the annual fee for primary and secondary schools will be abolished from next year. At the same time, the Textbook Loan Scheme will be provided to all students. Abdullah, who is also Finance Minister said: "With these measures, schooling in Malaysia is now completely free."

more

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Congratulations Malaysia

DOING THEIR PART: Some of the participants of this year's Merdeka parade taking a break after rehearsals at Dataran Merdeka yesterday. From the almost-perfect routine, it looks like all the participants are happy to be taking part in the 50th Merdeka Day parade

Friday, August 17, 2007

Russian technique saves man's left hand


The Tengku Ampuan Rahimah Hospital (HTAR) here may have received
some negative publicity lately but a 19-year-old youth has only gratitude
for doctors at the hospital.



S. Sri Devan was told that his hand would have to be amputated.

His hand was crushed in an accident on April 8 when his car hit a lamp post while trying to avoid a motorcycle.

"I was devastated when doctors at three private and public hospitals told me that nothing could be done to save my hand," said Sri Devan, a clerk.

However, his family refused to accept the doctors’ diagnoses and took him to HTAR.
Doctors at the HTAR performed five surgeries over the last three months and successfully used the Ilizarov technique, a Russian deformity rectification procedure, to treat his hand.

The method involved the installation of a circular fixator which provides structural support on the limb while allowing the soft tissue and bone to unite.

Today, Sri Devan’s left hand is both intact and functioning, except for his last two fingers which are still being treated.

"I’m so grateful to doctors at HTAR who persisted while others gave up," he said.

Sri Devan, who still wears the fixator on his arm, hopes to regain full use of his entire hand soon.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Malaysian Needs More Research Universities


The pic shows Datuk Mustapa Mohamed trying on a virtual reality helmet which helps in the treatment of fear of heights.



The government wants more public universities to work towards attaining research university status.
Higher Education Minister Datuk Mustapa Mohamed said yesterday this would be good for the nation.Earlier this month, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Universiti Malaya, Universiti Putra Malaysia and Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia were given the status."I know that universities outside the four are very keen on getting this status," Mustapa said after officiating the inaugural International Exposition of Research and Inventions of Institutions of Higher Learning (Pecipta) 2007 organised by the ministry at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre.


This is good suggestion that the university could excel in every aspects of discipline. I hope they don't produce Professor Kangkong (nut prof.). They should be innovative, creative and dynamic ; preach what you teach.
more



Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Malaysian Astronauts Bring Local Foods to Space






The two Malaysian astronauts, Dr. Sheikh Muszaphar and Dr. Faiz Khaleed paid a visit to MARDI to take part in sensory evaluation tests of several Malaysian foods. The foods developed by a team of MARDI scientists had to meet the highest standards of food safety and nutrition as well as be suitable for the unique conditions (microgravity) of the International Space Station (ISS). Similar tests will later be conducted in space by the astronaut and the results compared. It is hoped that an understanding of taste perceptions under microgravity and on earth can be obtained.


The list of Malaysian food developed:

Chicken satay
Beef Rendang
Pressed Chicken Briyani Rice
Banana Fruit Roll
Dehydrated Mango Slice
Confectionery Ginger Jelly
Roselle Granola Bar
Oven Baked Malaysian Cookie (Kuih Bangkit)
Fried Tempeh Chips
more pics

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Malaysians have taken to online social networking

The highest traffic volume to one of the world’s leading social networking sites, friendster.com, comes from Malaysia. Friendster.com is also the second most visited site in Malaysia next to yahoo.com. Out of the 13.5 million Internet users in Malaysia, 3.1 million are registered on Friendster. The site, the 17th largest in the world, was founded in California in 2002.With 44 million members worldwide, the site allows users to set up their personal profiles, which can either be accessed by anyone or by a select group of friends.
Users can make new friends, find old ones or locate activity partners and dates through the site.Users can email each other over Friendster, which also allows them to share photos, post bulletins, videos, and blog. Friendster Inc marketing and public relations director Jeff Roberto said according to Alexa.com, a website that provides information on web traffic, Friendster’s traffic breakout is: 22.4 per cent Malaysia; 21.8 per cent Philippines, 20 per cent Singapore; 12.7 per cent Indonesia; and six per cent United States."It is ranked the number one site in the Philippines, and number two in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia."The majority of users, about 55 per cent, are women. This pattern is the same all over the world. I think it’s probably because women are more social than men."The Asia user base is mostly 16 to 30-year-olds," he told the New Straits Times.Roberto said Asia currently accounts for over 70 per cent of total daily traffic to Friendster. It represents some 150 million daily page views and over four billion monthly page views.Asked why Friendster is bigger in Asia than in the West, Roberto said users in this part of the world are younger and tend to keep their pages open for viewing."Their profiles are open so there is more activity. We are also the first to enter this region."

source:http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Tuesday/Frontpage/20070612073117/Article/index_html

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Islamic Capital Market

Islamic Capital Market The Islamic Capital Market (ICM) refers to the market where capital market activities are carried out in ways that do not conflict with the conscience of Muslims and the religion of Islam. Transactions are free from the elements such as usury (riba), gambling (maisir) and ambiguity (gharar). The ICM has functioned as a parallel market to the conventional capital market for capital seekers and providers, and has played a complementary role to the Islamic banking system in broadening and deepening the Islamic financial markets in Malaysia. Today, Bursa Malaysia has the largest Islamic products listed as compared to exchanges in other Islamic countries.

source:http://www.klse.com.my/website/bm/products_and_services/islamic_capital_market.html

Sunday, May 27, 2007

What a pity-Elephant hit by train




An elephant crossing a railway line in Bekok early yesterday sustained two broken hind legs when it was hit by a train in Johor. The impact of the collision flung the animal, believed to be 10 years old and weighing about a tonne, into a 15m ravine near the tracks.

Wildlife and National Parks Department officers and doctors from the Veterinary Services Department were trying to save the elephant, which was reported to be in critical condition.


The elephant lying by the side of the tracks was fed sugarcane while awaiting aid from Wildlife Department officers and doctors from the Veterinary Services Department (pic)

Junita Mat Rashid http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/National/20070527073731/Article/index_html

Monday, May 14, 2007

Malaysia Becoming Number One Halal Producers


The 4th Malaysia International Halal Showcase (MIHAS 2007) and the World Halal Forum (WHF 2007) to be held here in May will play their role in providing the appropriate platform to showcase Malaysia's halal industry.

A major trade exposition, last year's MIHAS saw 392 companies from 17 countries participating while 216 foreign buyers representing 164 companies, took part in the business matching sessions.

In this context, she said the WHF 2007, would bring together individuals from the private sector to deliberate upon issues related to the halal market and the application of halal standards and accreditation.

A two-day forum would discuss the challenges and business opportunities with important topics such as manufacturing, science, research, logistics, investment models, halal market growth and also the global halal standards.

GO HALAL.


Sunday, May 13, 2007

Malaysia Today

Technorati Profile
For those who would like to read an independent news can do so http://www.malaysia-today.net/index.shtml

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Saturday, May 12, 2007

Agriculture in Malaysia

It has been a long way for Malaysia to be self sufficiency in agriculture. Although Malaysia has produced a lot of rubber, oil palm and cocoa but many had still in the pipe-line need to be export orientated. We still import a lot of foods and food-related products even these produces could be produced in the country.For example we still import a lot of corn,rice,sugar, wheat related products,fruits etc. There are ample of land that need to be cultivated and used profitably. I see there are possibilities of how Malaysia could become a giant food exporter in the world. There are a few things that need to be considered thoroughly.

1. Through research and development of the upbringing the products from farm to consumers. There should an aggressive drive by the relate parties in planting let such say promising fruits clones, good infrastructure like cold rooms, cold storage,roads,etc. Research should not be done in bits-and-pieces, meaning they should tackled from and at all angles brainstormed by a special committee left and right in more concerted way. Spend more time on planning rather that quick-result implementations.

2. Marketing of agricultural goods. I could tell you that from my experiences that the government did not bother much about the welfare of the farmers.This is because agricultural goods are sold at below par price from the market simply the quality is not good- no cold rooms, marketing outlet- although there is a marketing body to handle market- they still could not cope the problems which are fundamental e.g not enough staffs, facilities, etc. They just are just gov. officers; they be improve if the organization is privatise and run in a corporate way.

3.Transfer of technology. This things has been going on years and years.I can tell you that the experienced and progressived farmers are far better knowledge. There is only one program in the TV per week repeated twice.No popular agriculture magazines (except Chinese) to be read by all although there is one or two last time.

4.Commitment by the people- politicians especially. They should help every people who likes or interested in agriculture.Talking is not enough. I see now many 'big brothers' that benefit from the government but what about poor pak cik and mak cik in the kampungs left abandon without notice. This is true the government did not find alternative for them. Agriculture projects should be balance with urbanization because if this thing is not been considered properly there would be a big gap between the rich and poor .

5.Ethnic commitment. Malaysia is made of 3 main races. Malay,Chinese and Indians.What I observe it that produces made by the Malays are below price than their Chinese counterparts particularly the Chinese had their marketing outlet at the hypermarkets and big markets.Being true Malaysians this should be.For after 50 years of independent this should NOT be. Back to basics. Come on.

6. Ruler's Project. There are many rulers in Malaysia. What I see that they are very 'far' from the people.Unlike Thailand, the King had his own agricultural projects and I have have been to some of the projects .These projects are to solve hardcore problems such as turning drug traffics areas and drug-producing crops to fruit growing and tourism destinations.We should learn and follow what is good. Do more for the people.

7. Land banks and policy. The government should keep tracts of all land used and not used at every levels from state, districts, villages for agriculture. Land allocated for agriculture not should not be easily converted into housing or industrial lands without replacing new lands. Somebody should trace which land is not been used and the database is updated monthly. The policy is that every inch of land should utilized without being left idle. The land owners should given a notice if his /her land is not been cultivated for agriculture and summons should be sent if they don't work on it otherwise they should let other people to do for them.

Zainudin@2007

Friday, January 19, 2007

Monkey Deodorant Smells Sweet

What may be the most natural cologne in the world was recently discovered in a Mexican forest. The ingredients? Monkey spit and chewed up leaves.

According to a paper in this month's issue of the journal Primates, male Mexican spider monkeys chew the leaves of three aromatic plants: the Alamos pea tree, which has fragrant leaves and flowers, a flowering trumpet tree, and wild celery.

The ritual, which typically takes anywhere from 30 seconds to two minutes, was deemed monkey "self-anointing" by Matthias Laska, a professor of zoology at Linkoping University in Sweden.

Laska and his colleagues observed the behavior 20 times in two male spider monkeys that were part of a free-ranging group at the Parque de Flora y Fauna Silvestra Tropical in Veracruz, Mexico.

The researchers determined the monkeys always applied just one plant species at a time. The application was routine, not unlike a man who regularly spritzes on deodorant or cologne.

"In the majority of cases, the arm that did not hold the scent-bearing material was held high or grabbed a branch above the animal," Laska and his team wrote.

While this is the first reported case of such behavior in wild Mexican spider monkeys, similar routines have been spotted among both male and female capuchin monkeys, owl monkeys, other spider monkeys and lemurs. In most of these cases, the scientists speculated that the leaf mash might have been used to mitigate topical skin infections or repel bugs.

Laska and his team, however, found that of the plants used by the Mexican spider monkeys, only wild celery is known to have insect-repelling compounds and anti-fungal properties. The other plants simply smell good.

The scientists, therefore, concluded that self-anointing "may play a role in the context of social communication, possibly for signaling of social status or to increase sexual attractiveness."

In other words, monkeys could do it for the same basic reasons people use cologne.

While the chemistry behind this remains a mystery, the odors may mimic those of fragrant, naturally occurring primate steroids, which are presumed to act as sex-stimulating pheromones. Laska conducted an earlier study that found spider monkeys are particularly gifted at sniffing out such scents.

But not all monkeys want to smell like flowers and celery.

Mary Baker, assistant professor of anthropology at Rhode Island College, observed capuchin monkeys applying citrus and tobacco leaf mashes to their bodies.

Christina Campbell, a scientist at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at the University of California at Los Angeles, observed the same behavior in black-handed spider monkeys in Panama.

Campbell told Discovery News that "in general, I agree with the (new) findings," but she hasn't yet ruled out other possible reasons for scent rubbing.

"I think the behavior may be some kind of signaling, although I am not convinced," she said. "I also wonder whether it may function to stimulate or clean the gland that they rub the plant mixture on."

Laska hopes future studies will resolve such questions about the fragrant ritual.

source:Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2006

Monday, January 08, 2007

No takers for Mardi's end-products

CHEWY fruit strips, herbs with health properties and superior animal feed. These are only some of the products which the Malaysian Agricultural Research and Development Institute (Mardi) has developed, but not many people know about them.

The reason? Many of these products remain in the laboratory instead of reaching end users as they do not get commercialised and patented.

Mardi’s mission is "to develop and promote leading-edge technologies for the advancement of food and agriculture industries" but what good is research if there are no takers for the end-products?

The institute’s director-general Dr Abdul Shukor Abdul Rahman said Mardi’s three main outputs were products, processes and information.

However, these have to be innovated or they would be worthless to the end-user.

"The value chain of bringing in any findings from the laboratory to the table starts with research, development and commercialisation," he said.

Under the Ninth Malaysia Plan, Mardi will receive continuous funding from the Agriculture and Agro-based Industry Ministry for its research and development.

In 2006 alone, RM125 million was allocated for 85 projects. Mardi also gets funding from the Science, Technology and Innovation Ministry, totalling some RM45 million last year.

With more than 95 products and technologies ready to be commercialised and another 71 which have the potential for commercialisation, it would seem that it is indeed money well spent.

However, very few of the products developed by Mardi have been patented and commercialised.

One example is the transgenic papaya — Mardi’s solution for the devastating papaya virus problem (Papaya ringspot virus) which has plagued papaya plantations around the world.

Unfortunately, the transgenic papaya is still confined to the greenhouse and is not allowed to be grown outside as it is awaiting biosafety clearance.

So, just how much of Mardi’s technology has actually been patented?

Abdul Shukor admitted that gaining property rights was important but the patenting process took a long time — five to six years.

Furthermore, he said, patenting a product was not under Mardi’s jurisdiction but it had to go through Sirim which was the patent agent.

"Also, it is very costly to get a product patented overseas but the government has already taken that into consideration."

Over the past 10 years, Mardi has put in 14 applications to have its products or technology patented.

Out of these, one has been granted and one has been rejected while the others are still pending.

Abdul Shukor said Mardi would apply for more patents in the future, not just in Malaysia, but in other countries where he felt that their products could be "duplicated or copied".

Products which have yet to be patented are being value-added to ensure they are competitive enough for the international market.

Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers vice-president Datuk Paul Low said one of the reasons behind the lack of takers for Mardi’s inventions was that most local agriculture-based manufacturers were very small companies.

"To my knowledge, there are not that many agriculture-based players in Malaysia with enough funding to commercialise Mardi’s inventions, except for the government," he said.

Low said big, multinational companies like Nestle had their own research division and did not need to rely on Mardi.

"Research must be done in collaboration with the industry. The end-products must have the potential for commercialisation. If not, nobody would want to take it."

Intellectual Property Corporation of Malaysia (MyIPO) senior patent examiner Kamal Kormin said it takes a long time to grant patents because patent examiners had to do a worldwide check to see if anybody else had patented the product or technology.

Source :NST (7th January 2007)

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Vertical Farming

The Problem

By the year 2050, nearly 80% of the earth's population will reside in urban centers. Applying the most conservative estimates to current demographic trends, the human population will increase by about 3 billion people during the interim. An estimated 109 hectares of new land (about 20% more land than is represented by the country of Brazil) will be needed to grow enough food to feed them, if traditional farming practices continue as they are practiced today. At present, throughout the world, over 80% of the land that is suitable for raising crops is in use (sources: FAO and NASA). Historically, some 15% of that has been laid waste by poor management practices. What can be done to avoid this impending disaster?

A Potential Solution: farm vertically

The concept of indoor farming is not new, since hothouse production of tomatoes, a wide variety of herbs, and other produce has been in vogue for some time. What is new is the urgent need to scale up this technology to accommodate another 3 billion people. An entirely new approach to indoor farming must be invented, employing cutting edge technologies. The Vertical Farm must be efficient (cheap to construct and safe to operate). Vertical farms, many stories high, will be situated in the heart of the world's urban centers. If successfully implemented, they offer the promise of urban renewal, sustainable production of a safe and varied food supply (year-round crop production), and the eventual repair of ecosystems that have been sacrificed for horizontal farming.


It took humans 10,000 years to learn how to grow most of the crops we now take for granted. Along the way, we despoiled most of the land we worked, often turning verdant, natural ecozones into semi-arid deserts. Within that same time frame, we evolved into an urban species, in which 60% of the human population now lives vertically in cities. This means that, for the majority, we humans are protected against the elements, yet we subject our food-bearing plants to the rigors of the “great outdoors” and can do no more than hope for a good weather year. However, more often than not now, due to a rapidly changing climate regime, that is not what follows. Massive floods, protracted droughts, class 4-5 hurricanes, and severe monsoons take their toll each year, destroying millions of tons of valuable crops. Don’t our harvestable plants deserve the same level of “comfort” and protection that we now enjoy? The time is at hand for us to learn how to safely grow our food inside environmentally controlled multistory buildings within urban centers. If we do not, then in just another 50 years, the next 3 billion people will surely go hungry, and the world will become a much more unpleasant place in which to live.
Advantages of Vertical Farming
Year-round crop production; 1 indoor acre is equivalent to 4-6 outdoor acres or more, depending upon the crop (e.g., strawberries: 1 indoor acre = 30 outdoor acres)
No weather-related crop failures due to droughts, floods, pests
All VF food is grown organically: no herbicides, pesticides, or fertilizers
VF virtually eliminates agricultural runoff by recycling black water
VF returns farmland to nature, restoring ecosystem functions and services
VF greatly reduces the incidence of many infectious diseases that are acquired at the agricultural interface
VF converts black and gray water into potable water by collecting the water of
evapotranspiration
VF adds energy back to the grid via methane generation from composting non-edible
parts of plants and animals
VF dramatically reduces fossil fuel use (no tractors, plows, shipping.)
VF converts abandoned urban properties into food production centers
VF creates sustainable environments for urban centers
VF creates new employment opportunities
We cannot go to the moon, Mars, or beyond without first learning to farm indoors on
earth
VF may prove to be useful for integrating into refugee camps
VF offers the promise of measurable economic improvement for tropical and subtropical
LDCs. If this should prove to be the case, then VF may be a catalyst in helping to reduce or even reverse the population growth of LDCs as they adopt urban agriculture as a strategy for sustainable food production.
VF could reduce the incidence of armed conflict over natural resources, such as water
and land for agriculture

source: http//www.verticalfarm.com



The Secrets of DNA

Introduction

Major Milestone in the History of Humanity

Introduction: Major Milestone in the History of Humanity
The data Bank of Life: DNA
The Question That Demolishes the Theory of Evolution: How did the DNA Originate?
The Question That Demolishes the Theory of Evolution: The Theory of Information and the end of Materialism
The Ape-Man Similarity is A Fabrication
Darwinist-Materialist Misconceptions
About The Human Genome Project

The Latest Fossil Claim of the
Theory of Evolution has also Become History

Today is the day of a major milestone in history. The materialist philosophy, once imposed on the mass of humanity under the guise of science, is ironically being defeated today by science itself.

Materialism, the philosophy which holds that everything is composed of matter and which denies the existence of God, is actually the contemporary version of paganism. Ancient pagans used to worship non-living beings like wooden or stone totem poles and considered them divine beings. Materialist philosophy, on the other hand, bases its claim on the belief that man and all other beings are created by atoms and molecules. According to this superstitious view, non-living atoms somehow organized themselves and over time acquired life and consciousness finally bringing man into being.

This superstitious belief of materialism is called "evolution". The belief in evolution, first introduced in the pagan cultures of the ancient Sumerians and then the ancient Greeks, was in a way revived in the 19th century by a group of materialist scientists and brought onto the world agenda. Charles Darwin is the best known of these scientists. The theory of evolution he advanced wasted the time of the world of science for 150 years, and despite its widely acknowledged flawed nature, has been hitherto sustained for purely ideological reasons.


The pre-Socratic Greek philosophers evidently received their concepts of evolutionary cosmogony from the even more ancient religious leaders of Egypt and Babylonia or Sumeria. The Sumerian tablets at the left are based on the superstitious belief of that time and refer to the imaginary stages in man's creation.

However, as mentioned earlier, today, materialism is collapsing with a big boom. It is often stated that there were three important materialist theorists who steered the 19th century: Freud, Marx and Darwin. The theories of the first two were examined, tested, and, proving to be invalid, subsequently rejected in the 20th century. Nowadays, the theory of Darwin is also collapsing.

Some important developments in June 2000 accelerated this great collapse of materialism.

First, scientists carrying out experiments to exceed the speed of light made a discovery which turned all scientific premises upside down. In an experiment in which the speed of light was exceeded many times, the scientists observed with astonishment that the effect of the experiment occurred before its cause. This was the defeat of the claim of "causality" that was put forward on the basis of materialist views, in the 19th century. The subject was outlined in a newspaper under the headline "It has been proved that effect without cause is possible and that the end of an event can happen before its beginning". Indeed, the occurrence of the effect of an action before the action that seems to be its cause, is scientific evidence that all events are created individually. This totally demolishes the materialist dogma.

A few weeks later, it was revealed that Archaeopteryx, a fossil bird presented as "the most important fossil evidence" by Darwinists for more than a century, was actually not evidence for, but a blow to the theory. When another fossil, some 75 million years older than this fossil which was allegedly the "primitive ancestor of birds", and no different from modern birds, was discovered, evolutionists were shocked. On June 25th, 2000, even a journal which used to present Archaeopteryx as the "primitive ancestor of birds" was obliged to report the news item headlined "The Ancestor of Birds Proved to be a Bird".

Finally, the Human Genome Project, an attempt to draft a rough map of the human genome, was concluded and the details of the "genetic information", which highlighted how superior God's creation of living beings is, have been revealed to mankind. Today, everyone who considers the results of this project and finds out that a single human cell contains enough information to be stored in thousands of encyclopaedia pages, grasps what a great miracle of creation this is.

Charles Darwin
Sigmund Freud
Karl Marx

Nevertheless, evolutionists try to misinterpret this recent development, which, in truth, works against them, and present it as evidence for "evolution". Unable to explain even how the DNA chain of a tiny bacterium originated, evolutionists try to deliver messages such as "human genes resemble animal genes". Such messages are inaccurate and have no scientific value. They are designed to mislead society. Meanwhile, some press institutions, both because of their ignorance on the subject and their prejudiced approach, suppose that the Human Genome Project provides "evidence of evolution" and try to present it that way.

In this booklet, the abovementioned evolutionist misconceptions are explained and the irrational and shallow nature of the objections raised to creation are clarified. In addition, the severity of the blow the recent findings have struck against Darwinism is explicitly revealed.

When you read this book, you, too, will see that materialist philosophy which rejects God is about to meet its end and that in the 21st century, humanity will return to the real purpose of their creation by being relieved of deceits such as evolution.

more at http://www.evidencesofcreation.com/dna01.htm

by Harun Yahya