^^ And thus we see the crux of your 'debating style', zeke: unless one can disprove to your satisfaction any assertion or unsupported claim you care to make, then that assertion or unsupported claim constitutes an irrefutable argument. Is it really worth trying to engage anyone on this basis?
Parenthetically, despite the fact that Davis and Kenyon's Gould citation has been unequivocally shown to be wrong, you simply refuse to accept this and declare that because they have not been called liars, then the claim must be true, disregarding the fact that they might also be either just careless or incompetent and that no one has the resources or time to track down every misrepresentation made in every paper, article, blog and website. Whatever the case, however, the fact that you seem to be unable to support your argument about homology with reasoned explanation or to find a more reliable source to support your claim speaks for itself.
ETA Of course, insofar as Davis and Kenyon's Of Pandas and People amounts to nothing more than a book with religious roots deep in Christian creationism, transparently disguised to present a supposedly 'scientific' counterargument against evolutionary theory, one may feel entitled to question their absolute honesty. Indeed, in its discussion of evolutionary transitions Pandas perpetrates a number of distortions which, on the face of it, appear to be intentional, such as implying that the well-documented transitional forms between reptiles and mammals do not exist and denying that, for example, the evolution of the jaw hinge (one of the best exemplars of evolutionary transition) occurred at all. Davis and Kenyon are entitled to dispute the implications of transitional forms of the jaw-hinge, but to simply claim that no fossil record exists of such a process does at least raise some concern about their motives and intentions.