TOG
Member
Chopper,
I wasn't sure this wasn't a wild goose chase until I foundand I'm interested in what everyone thinks.
I haven't watched the whole video, but, based on what I have watched, I would think it's not very reliable, to say the least. Here are some of the problems I see with it:
- He said you could only get a chromosome count from living white blood cells. That's not true. You can get a chromosome count from any cell, and it doesn't have to be alive, although the DNA will break down over time, so they would probably not be able to get much information from very old (hundreds or thousands of years) cells.
- He took some blood to a place he only refers to as "such and such". Is there really a medical center in Israel called "Such and Such"? I doubt it.
- He tells the people at the Such and Such Facility to "tell me what you can about" the blood. You don't go into a medical or research facility and tell them "tell me what you can about it". There are thousands of tests they could do, and you have to be specific about which tests you want done.
- They say that the blood is human blood, but then say it only has 24 chromosomes. The number of chromosomes is one of the things that's used to determine what species blood is from, so if it only had 24 chromosomes, they would never have said it was human.
- We don't just have 46 chromosomes, we have 23 pairs of chromosomes. All 23 pairs are needed for a normal body to develop in the womb, and for it to survive after birth. If there is even one chromosome missing, or if there is even one extra chromosome, then the baby will either be seriously deformed or, more likely, will die in before it's born.
- And to top it all off, this is Ron Wyatt we're talking about. Pretty much everything he has ever claimed to have discovered has been proven to be false.
The TOG