In May 2012, Mark Armitage went on a dinosaur dig at the famous fossil site of Hell Creek in Montana, where he unearthed the largest triceratops horn ever found there. Back at CSUN, he put the fossil under his microscope and made the startling discovery: unfossilized, undecayed tissue was present.
The evolutionists present to you a case that is so fragile it needs deception, trickery and outright fraud to perpetuate it. They love to trot out people like Bill Nye,
not a scientist, to force feed you slop about dinosaurs being "millions of years" old. They want you to believe that, they
need you to believe that. Why? So they can show you how the Bible is not true, and that creation didn't really happen the way the Bible says it did.
"In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." Genesis 1:1 (KJV)
Mark Armitage was a scientist at California State University, where he and his work were highly respected by students and peers alike. While at the Hell Creek Formation excavation site in Montana, Armitage discovered what he believed to be the largest triceratops horn ever unearthed at the site. Inside that horn, Armitage found soft tissue that would not be present in a fossil from millions of years ago. His discovery was earth-shattering to the scientific community, and instead of being praised, he was immediately fired from his position. You can't have people exposing the lie of evolution on campus, that just won't work.
You can fight the Bible all you like, and bring out all the phony and corrupt
phony scientists like Bill Nye to say otherwise, but the biblical account of creation is true. Man and dinosaurs did indeed exist at the same time, and Armitage's amazing discovery is just further proof of that fact.
CSUN Scientist Fired After Soft Tissue Found On Dinosaur Fossil
Mark Armitage’s February 2013 study was published in the peer-reviewed
Acta Histochemica, a journal of cell and tissue research. Two week later, he
found himself without a job. A biology professor had come into his office and said, “We are not going to tolerate your religion in this department.”
Armitage fought back. Professors and students alike had praised his work managing the microscope lab. His suit alleged he was excluded from a secret meetings of the microscopy committee. In a “smoking gun” email, university officials suggested they could ease Armitage out of his part-time position by making it full-time, Reinach said.
A colleague described the process as a “witch hunt,” according to
Inside Higher Ed.
For two years, CSUN fought Armitage’s lawsuit. The university alleged his firing was simply a restructuring of their biology department and not a case of religious discrimination. But CSUN lost its bid to have the judge summarily throw the case out of court as groundless in July of last year.
So CSUN settled with Armitage for $399,500 in 2016, according to Inside Higher Ed.
Alan Reinach, Armitage’s attorney, hailed the settlement as precedent-setting.
“We are not aware of any other cases where a creationist received a favorable outcome,” said Reinach, executive director of the Church State Council, a nonprofit California public interest legal organization. “This was truly a historic case.”
CSUN has downplayed its decision to settle, saying in a statement that the university is committed to religious freedom and freedom of speech.
“The Superior Court did not rule on the merits of Mr. Armitage’s complaint, and this voluntary settlement is not an indication of wrong-doing,” according to a CSUN statement published in Retraction Watch. “The decision to settle was based on a desire to avoid the costs involved in a protracted legal battle, including manpower, time and state dollars.”
But Reinach countered: “They certainly would not have paid that kind of money if they did not recognize that we had them dead to rights. The state doesn’t put large, six-figure settlement money out unless they are really concerned they are going to lose.”
Prior to looking for soft tissue in dinosaur bones, Armitage studied diatoms, unicellular organisms that make up phytoplankton, which reveal a dizzying complexity and organization at the microscopic level.
According to Armitage, the beauty and complexity of diatoms lends credence to the idea they are a product of a Creator and not of spontaneous evolution.
“Evolution is structure supported by two pillars: one is chance, and the other is time. Chance is required because we obviously can’t say that a thinking force created life on earth. That is anathema for the materialists. If you kick out one of those two pillars the whole structure collapses,” Armitage noted. “If you kick out chance by showing incredible design, the structure of evolution starts to totter and it may crash. Because you cannot have design in a world that doesn’t have a Designer.
“The other pillar is time because you cannot get a man from a frog unless the princess kissed the frog. That’s a fairy tale. So in science you have to have deep time to get evolution.”
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