Stuff You Should Know - How the Human Microbiome Project Works
Episode Date: May 13, 2014If it was possible to take a full scan of all of the DNA of every cell in and on your body the results would be startling: Only 1 percent would be human. The other 99 percent comprises all of the bact...eria, fungi, viruses and other microbes you literally cannot live without. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to stuff you should know from how stuff works.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. I almost just forgot what I was going to say.
Your name? Yeah. Wow. There's Charles W. Tuck Bright piping in. Yep. And there's
the trio. The trifecta. And this terrible iHeart lamp. Ah, you think? Well, we are getting a
little heat off of it right now. It's nice. Did you ever see that iHeart commercial about the lamp
that was thrown out on the street? No. It was really good. Well, what happened to it? Was it
like the monkey at the iHeart? No, it was like a lamp gets thrown out at like someone's just
redoing parts of their apartment and the lamp is kicked to the curb as it were. Computer animated.
So it's it's human formed. Okay. Human formed. What am I saying? Anthropogenic. Yeah. Anthropomorphize.
And like looks up at the apartment that he was just thrown out of and stuff like that.
When does he go back to Sweden? I don't remember how it ends.
You just remember the lamp like turns out human. It was sad. It was like sad. Okay. Got teared up.
Did you go buy one of those lamps? No, of course. That didn't work. No.
So I guess you're feeling pretty good since you're talking about lamps and everything.
You know me and lamps. I do. That means it's a good day. It's a clear signal.
Chuck's in a good mood, everybody. You know one of the reasons why you're in a good mood?
Because your guts are functioning properly. Yeah. Yeah. Ish. Yeah.
Yeah. You know me. It's day to day. Yeah. With my stomach. Well, that's exactly right.
Things change very quickly. Yeah. Because of your stomach and your stomach can affect your mood.
As a matter of fact, the vast majority of the serotonin, which is a mood stabilizing neurotransmitter,
is produced in your gut. Yeah. And the way that things like serotonin and other stuff
is produced is thanks to our microbiome, dude. Yeah. Our microbiome. This is the most fascinating
thing going on in medicine science right now. Yeah. I get the impression reading various articles
when scientists talk about it. They all seem really pumped up. It's like the breakthrough
of the 21st century. And this thing just started. It's 2014. Yeah. And this could remain the
breakthrough of the century. Yeah. And I mean, if you think about the timeline,
up until the 20th century, you were like a plant or an animal. Right. And then it was literally
like the 1950s and 60s that they started saying maybe we should break things down a little further.
And they came up with the five kingdoms. Right. I think they're now even as a sixth kingdom.
Well, there's three domains now. Yeah. Eight kingdoms. Oh, there's eight. There's eight. And
three, two of the domains are accounted for two of the kingdoms as well, bacteria and archaea.
Yeah. And archaea used to be thought that they were the same as bacteria. Yes. Then they started
looking into them a little more and they're like, oh, these guys are made up of different amino acids
and they have different characteristics. And archaea, for example, are the kind of microbial
life that you'll only find around undersea hot water sulfur vents. Yeah. Like volcano.
Crazy places. Not in your vagina or in your mouth. Well, no, because they're extremophiles and a
vagina or a mouth isn't that extreme. Well, it is because archaea lives there. That's right. So
the fact that we figured out that archaea are different than bacteria and not only that they
don't just live in extreme environments, but also on the human body. Yeah. That was something we can
thank the human microbiome project for. Yeah. And that wasn't, I think they didn't even discover
archaea till the 1970s. So this, all this stuff is brand new. Right. And exciting. And by the way,
the three domains are bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes, which are us. Yes. Or eukaryotes,
because we have nucleus as nuclei. Yeah. Let's talk about this, man. We have before,
I'm sure you remember in the fecal transplant episode. Yes. Because it definitely factors into
it. You can poop shakes. Yeah. You can cure claustridium difficile, which is something where
that it's a gut microbe. It's very harmful to humans that can colonize your guts after you
take antibiotics, which is basically just like a slash and burn approach, which again,
thanks to the human microbiome project, we're starting to understand, we might want to use
antibiotics because what we used to just think of as almost entirely bad are actually mostly
beneficial. Sure. And even some of the bad bacteria, aka germs, are actually present
in our microbiome and normally live in harmony. Yeah. It just appears that when the microbiome
gets out of whack, that's when disease happens. Yeah. Like you may have E. Coli in your body
right now. Yeah, I probably do. But it's not a big deal. If you're, we always talk about stasis,
homeostasis. Yeah. Keeping things balanced in life is the key. Yes. And it's definitely the
key with your own personal microbiome, which we have learned is very individualized, which
we'll get to with the project. Right. So if you take a human body and you scanned all the genes
in it, what you would find is there are about a hundred times more microbial genes than human genes
in a genetic scan of a human body. Yeah. Our human cells only make up about 10% of the cells
in the body. And here's another great stat. We actually, the healthiest person on the planet
has between two and five pounds of bacteria pounds. Yeah. Of your body weight about up to five
pounds is accounted for. Yes. What's crazy is, is that that's even considering that microbial cells
are anywhere from a tenth to a hundredth the size of an average human cell. Yeah. So do you
know how many, how much five pounds would have to? That adds up to quite a few. Yeah. As a matter
of fact, there's an estimated hundred trillion microbes on an average human person just in,
yeah, on and a part of such a, such a part of us and our, our normal functioning that we're finding
very quickly that they're, they're pretty much interchangeable. They're, they are one with us
and as their host, we are kind of one with them. Yeah. Like you have fungus on your skin. Yeah.
No big deal. Right. Well, that's another thing too. We should talk about when people say microbe,
it's kind of a catch-all word for tiny. Yeah. Any tiny, typically unicellular life. And that's
the case here too. But it doesn't just mean bacteria. The human microbiome is made up of
lots of bacteria and lots of, lots of different types of bacteria. For example, the mouth may have
up to 5,000 different species of bacteria. Yeah. And they're not just lasing around in your body.
Like they are responsible for keeping your body in check or, you know, sometimes responsible for
it being out of whack. Right. But they're all, they're all doing something or laying there,
waiting to do something. You also have a, what's called a viral. You have viruses in your microbiome
and they appear to be present to keep the bacteria populations from getting out of control. Like
they're there to infect bacteria, to kill them off. And they, it's kind of like they're the lions to
the gazelles of the microbiome. Okay. You take away the lions, you got too many gazelles. Yeah.
They all start to starve. They don't function correctly. They may even eat each other. You
don't want to see a gazelle eat another gazelle. So you have lions there and the lions, these apex
predators. Yeah. Keep the gazelle population in check and ultimately healthy, paradoxically.
Yeah. True. Same thing with the virome in your microbiome. Yeah. I mean, we know they aid,
like gut bacteria, AIDS digestion, and we'll get the gut bacteria more. I mean, they're discovering
just all kinds of things it affects. Right. Synthesize vitamins. When you poop in the toilet,
and you look at your poop, which you should do, by the way, and like, you know, on a regular basis.
How much is it? Is it half? Half of that is... I've seen anywhere from a third to half.
So a third to half of that is microbial biomass. It's not food. No, it's like dead and living
bacteria that you're pooping out. Yeah. About half. Half. I saw something that was kind of
mind-blowing too. It's really neat and accurate, especially on a microbial level. All right. To
imagine your alimentary system, your digestive system. Yeah. As the inside of that is technically
outside of your body. I'm Mangesha Tickler, and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology,
but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might
not smoke, but you're going to get second-hand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if
the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there
is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove
in, and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show
about astrology, my whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to
father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. On the podcast, Paydude the 90s called David
Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude, bring you back to the days
of slip dresses and choker necklaces. We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s. We lived it,
and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it. It's a podcast packed
with interviews, co-stars, friends, and non-stop references to the best decade ever. Do you remember
going to Blockbuster? Do you remember Nintendo 64? Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal? No, it was hair. Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger and the dial-up sound
like poltergeist? So leave a code on your best friend's beeper, because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing. Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the cartridge
from your Game Boy, blowing on it and popping it back in as we take you back to the 90s. Listen to
Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You have a whole trail running through the middle of your body that's technically the outside world.
That's technically the outside. Yeah, I guess I see what you mean.
Just chew on it for a minute. The inside of your digestive system is technically the outside of
your body. That's outside of your body. Yeah, it's confusing. It is, but once your head wraps
around it, it's like one-hand clapping kind of thing, and you're just like, whoa, that is neat.
All right, so that's I guess the briefest of overviews of microbes and bacteria,
which we've talked about ad nauseam on the show. Yeah, and our great digestion podcast. That was
one of my favorite ones. And then we've already talked about the poop shakes.
So the National Institutes of Health came up with a plan, got some money together and said,
let's try and do what the Human Genome Project did. Let's try and map out the human microbiome,
which is a very tough task because everyone is different. Well, yeah, everyone's microbiome
is different. And I just saw today it was released from the University of Michigan.
They've kind of already determined there is no such thing as a baseline healthy microbiome.
Yeah, and that was one of the goals of this project that was started in 2007 was
that to establish a baseline microbiome. They didn't know what one looked like. They knew
that people had tons of bacteria and protozoa and viruses all over us and in us. But what
is that supposed to look like? And when you figure out what it's supposed to look like,
then you can figure out what an unhealthy one looks like. And then possibly how to correct that
by adjusting this microbial ecosystem back to a baseline. But I'm not surprised that they found
that there isn't a baseline that is too different. And that doesn't mean that they can't like learn
a lot and help us out a lot. What they're basically saying is you take a dozen completely
healthy people and their microbiomes are going to be completely different still.
Yeah. And there is one huge revolution in the study of bacterial or microbial life
that made this project possible. Same with the human genome, but much more for this.
It's called metagenomics. And prior to the advent of metagenomics, if you wanted to study bacteria,
you had to find a bacteria that could be replicated, cloned in a laboratory setting.
And this accounted for just a very, very small fraction of the number of microbes out there.
What's more, so not only did you not have a representative sample, but you also didn't have
anything less than an artificial setting. So even if you did get these microbes,
if you could replicate them in the lab, they weren't going to behave the way they would
in their natural setting, like on your body. So what metagenomics did was you can now take
like a representative sample, say like a clump of soil or a swab of somebody's ear fold and get
all of the microbes in there and then basically just do this rough scan of them, separate all the
DNA out, add these enzymes that go and clip coherent fragments of this DNA out, and then
you take it and you put it into what's called a model organism. And that model organism starts
to replicate as cells. And then each cell displays a certain characteristic associated
with a different microbe. So all of a sudden, you can start studying the different cells and say,
oh, well, this has to do with this microbe and this means that this protozoa is present and so
on and so forth. And now you can get a truly representative sample of what's in a microbiome.
And without metagenomics, none of this would be possible. But now we're starting to find
all sorts of new, not just information, but even new species of bacteria and protozoa and fungi
from the study of this stuff. Which is a great thing. It is a great thing. And we'll explain
why it's a great thing right after this break. I'm Mangesh Atkala, and to be honest, I don't
believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life. In India,
it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get second hand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses,
major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on
this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't
look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a
skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
and the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. On the podcast,
Paydude the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker necklaces. We're going to use Hey Dude
as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it. It's a podcast
packed with interviews, co-stars, friends, and non-stop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster? Do you remember Nintendo 64? Do you remember getting
frosted tips? Was that a cereal? No, it was hair. Do you remember AOL instant messenger and the dial-up
sound like poltergeist? So leave a code on your best friend's beeper because you'll want to be
there when the nostalgia starts flowing. Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the
cartridge from your Game Boy, blowing on it and popping it back in as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey Chuck. Hey. You know me. Yeah. I'm a snack guy. Yeah. I love snacks. You do. I also love
convenient snacks. Well, I've got some news for you then, my friend. What? Nature Box. Oh yes,
I love Nature Box. You want convenient snacks. We're talking healthy and great tasting snacks,
like have you ever had the PB and J granola? Oh yeah, that's good stuff. I also love the salted
caramel pretzel pops, which are awesome. They're like basically four different great things all
mixed together. And I have to admit I'm addicted to the sriracha roasted cashews. Oh yeah? Well,
the great thing about all that is there are zero trans fats, zero high fructose corn syrup,
and nothing artificial, my friend. That's right. There's also snacks that are gluten-conscious
and non-GMO. Plus, Chuck, like we said, it's convenient. You can get Nature Box shipped right
to your door by heading over to naturebox.com. Yeah, and it's free shipping. Anywhere in the U.S.,
baby. That's right. So we have a special deal, as if that wasn't good enough. You can try Nature
Box right now and get 50% off your first box by going to naturebox.com. That's naturebox.com.
Stay full. Stay strong. Go to naturebox.com. That's naturebox.com. Okay, we're back.
All right, so now I guess we can talk about some of these great findings, some of the newest findings
in the last, what year is it? Well, they started in 2007. Yeah, seven years old. And it seems like
the first crop of amazing stuff started in about 2012. Yeah, so after they had categorized things
and got thrown all the crawfish out on the table. Right, the corn. Yeah. The little corn's good.
Have you ever done that? I've had that before, yeah. It's good stuff. Yeah, it's fun.
Yeah. Go to a big party. There's a place in
on Buford Highway called the Crawfish Shack. I've heard of that, but I haven't been.
Did they do it like that? Did they just dump it on the table? It's all picnic tables. No,
it's in like bowls and stuff like that. But it's all picnic tables inside. Yeah. And
just huge rolls of paper towels. And dude, that place is so good. Yeah, I guess you can't do
that as a restaurant. But if you go to a true crawfish boil at someone's home, you have the
picnic table covered with the plastic thing and you just dump it on the table. And everyone
just stands around like a bunch of animals, getting drunk and eating like sucking the heads
of crawfish. My family used to do something similar to that when I was little in Toledo.
We would eat my dad called a garbage pail stew. Yeah. Are you familiar? Is it like all the
leftovers? No, it's like you're using trash can to make it. Oh, never heard of it. Over like a
flame. Okay. And obviously you use a new trash can. Sure. Like a brand new one. So I guess
when dad got a new trash can, we would have garbage pails too. Anyway. A metal trash can?
It was, yes. Okay. It was more like a, no, the plastic just added. No, I'm just trying to,
like one of the big large ones. Yeah, like the old time ones. Right. Yeah. One of the old timey ones.
What kind of flame you got in your house? I don't remember what he cooked it on.
Interesting. I don't, like in my, in my mind's eye, I can't look down. I can just see,
I can just see the kind of the top of it. But anyway, it was like a Yankee, Northern,
Midwestern version of it. So there was like lots of cabbage in it. Oh, sure. And like Kilbasa and
stuff like that. But it was essentially the same thing. Yeah. And you would eat it on like,
like newspaper. I can't wait to get emails from people who are like, we did that same thing.
I've looked around. I've never seen it since. I'm sure that, yeah, that sounds like a thing that,
or although your dad is very unique person. Insane is the way to put it.
Yeah. All right. So back to the project and the findings.
One of the things they've learned is that periodontists, this gum disease, some bacteria are
elevated if you have periodontists. So that's going to give you a little insight to maybe
how you can better take care of your mouth. What kind of bacteria you need in there? What
kind you don't? Yeah, exactly. And like, for example, striptococcus mutans is responsible for
cavities. So you want to take care of your striptococcus mutans. The thing is, Chuck,
that reading this made me wonder, like, are we going to go the other direction now where it's
like, we understand that you can't just use antibiotics to get rid of everything. Yeah.
But if we identify bacteria that's like, oh, well, that one gives you cavities. Let's get rid
of all of that and find some sort of medicine that just gets rid of that. Right. It could make
things even worse in a whole other direction. Like one thing that I figured out from this is that
the microbiome appears to exist in balance. Like stuff that should make a sick E. coli,
kinds of strep, staph, that kind of thing. It exists on a healthy person's microbiome
and it's just hanging out there. So it doesn't mean that they're inherently
disease causing for us or that they're inevitably disease causing. Apparently, if they exist in
harmony with their neighbors, that's the way it's supposed to be. And we can't just root out just
ones that make a sick and get rid of those because I think it'll have repercussions.
But we might have a future where instead of an antibiotic, you actually take a bacteria that
will attack the other bacteria, the bad stuff. Right. Or you can write exactly. As long as
we're not intervening and going after a specific bacteria, we can aid the bacteria like you say
that will fight it naturally by eating some sort of sugary paste. Or probiotics. I mean,
that's what that is, right? Yeah. And they're all the rage. I mean, that's an issue that's
being examined in more detail thanks to the microbiome, like do probiotics work?
Yeah. And apparently, the jury's still out. Yeah. Well, in theory, they should work. Yeah.
But it depends on whether these things are actually colonizing your guts. And also,
I have the impression that it's like, you don't really know what you're doing when you're adding
like all these new people in the neighborhood. Yeah. And because everyone's microbiome is so
different, some one probiotic for one person might be great. And for another person might not do
anything or make things worse. I don't know. Yeah. Which is another goal of the human microbiome
project that if we start to understand, you know, what a colony, maybe there's not a normal colony
for everybody, but what an individual's normal colony looks like, then you can take blood or
samples and make adjustments based specifically on what you need right there. It could be the
end of pharmaceutical drugs conceivably. Another doing a lot of research into how your gut bacteria
affects obesity in your weight. They have found obese mice and transferred micro microbes from
their gut into skinny mice and the skinny mice gained weight. And there's just type in
gut bacteria and obesity. And there are a lot of studies going on now, thinking that maybe
correcting your gut bacteria could actually help you help your metabolism, you know, straighten
out. Right. Like they think the bacteria itself directly informs how the body uses their stores
energy. Yeah. Yeah. The one that blew me away was there's a type of bacteria that helps that
helps break down milk in humans. Oh, yeah. And typically it's in the gut. But as a woman advances
in pregnancy, some of it moves down to the vagina. Yeah. And at first, the researchers who found
this were like, well, what's the deal with that? And then they figured it out. They think, yeah,
when a baby is born and it passes through the vagina, it basically becomes covered in this
bacteria in just some of it. And that bacteria goes down and colonizes the baby's guts and
prepares it almost immediately to start breaking down breast milk. Yeah, evidently,
brand new babies are just sponges. And like they're experimenting with cesarean sections
to just swab, like after you have the cesarean section, you bring the baby out, swab it with
vaginal mucus. Yeah. And basically, it just soaks right into the skin and maybe have the same
result. Right, or swab their mouth or something like that. Yeah. Another way, and I guess that's
kind of related to is with the immune system. Apparently, the microbiome acts as kind of
like a teacher to the early immune system. Yeah. And says like, Hey, these are the good ones.
These are the bad ones. Why don't you go ahead and produce some T killer cells or killer T cells?
Yeah. But not too many. And we'll just go ahead and keep the homeostasis going. And they basically
like teach a young immune system how to operate at an optimal level. And they found that by engineering
mice that are like totally germ free. Yeah, their immune systems have a tendency to go crazy. Like
they'll become inflamed in the presence of what are say non harmful fungi. Yeah. They'll become
so inflamed that they'll damage the surrounding tissue, or they'll have like irritable bowel
syndrome or Crohn's disease, they think also is a flux state of the microbiome in the gut.
So apparently, it directly impacts the immune system as well, which my friend lends a lot of
weight to the hygiene hypothesis. Yeah, that's basically the notion that here in the West and
even in developing countries now, children are seeing such a decrease in infection when they're
kids that when they grow up, they have an increased number of allergies and maybe autoimmune issues.
Yeah. And you kind of see it playing out, you know, right? Like it's a real thing. Like if
you're slathering your child with Purell, you're not doing them any favors. Right. So they may
have asthma later on because of that. Exactly. And they are becoming, they're coming to think that
it's because of the, the just a stunted growth of the microbiome. Yeah. And I think they found
now even they think they have a direct link between your gut bacteria and allergies. So if you're,
if you get hay fever, it may be because of your gut bacteria. Right. And it makes just uttering
complete sense too. Yeah. Like your body has been exposed to these things early on, learn that they're
not harmful and no longer produces antibodies as a result of their presence. Yeah. Because that's
all an allergy is. It's a case of mistaken identity. Your immune system thinks that pollen or something
is a harmful for an invader and launches your immune response. Pretty cool. Some of the other
interesting things they found so far is that there wasn't a single microbe that everyone had in the
study. Yeah. Which is pretty interesting. And that microbes are most similar on the same site of
different people. So like you and I have more similar microbes in our armpit, even though we're
different people. Right. Then you, your microbes in your armpit has to do with your belly button.
Yeah. Ours are more similar than the ones in different places on your body. Yeah. That's pretty
neat. And different microbes can do completely different things. Like the way you digest food
might use one microbe and I might use another or that same microbe might have a completely
different function in you than it does in me. Right. So so personalized. It's like,
it feels like the beginning of like hyper personalized medicine. I think it is in the future.
I definitely think it is. I think it's also the beginning of a kindler, kinder, gentler approach
to treating disease. Yeah. All disease. Like it's entirely possible, especially if you take a brain
based view of mental illness. It's possible that every bit of disease can be cured. Yeah.
By, by understanding the microbiome, even cancer, apparently, they found from this
that some types of cancer managed to cloak themselves by taking like resin or residue
from certain types of bacteria and basically sneaking past your, your immune system and going
and, and lodging itself into cells and hijacking them and creating tumors, but it cloaks itself
by getting buddy, buddy with certain kinds of bacteria. Cancer is a jerk. Yes. Cancer is a big
time jerk. You know, we've kind of covered it here and there, but I could see more specific
cancer podcasts in our future. Sure. You know what? Yeah. So like so far we've done two that
specifically got into the microbiome, but we've never done like any microbiome one. Yeah. So
I think we should come back like a year from now and even more stuff is out and do like
the microbiome. Yeah. It seems like they're, they're making breakthroughs at a pretty rapid
pace. Yes. So in a year, they might, everyone might be skinny. Yeah. Because of the microbiome
pill. Have you seen a picture of like an obese mouse next to like a skinny or normal sized
mouse? Yeah. It's pretty depressing. It is. Um, sad mouse. Okay. So I will see you here
at the end of next April. Uh, God willing for the microbiome one. Yeah. Deal. All right.
If you want to learn more about the human microbiome, you can type that, well, those
words into the search bar at howstuffworks.com. Uh, and I said howstuffworks.com. So it's time
for the listener mail. Uh, Josh, I'm going to call this a response from a creationist. Oh, okay.
We got a few of these. Yeah. Uh, hey guys, listen to your podcast on natural selection and really
enjoyed it. I'm a biologist who is a Christian and creationist. Uh, natural selection is not
what we disagree on. And when I say we, I mean most creationist, but of course with every group
there are outliers. Uh, we agree with microevolution, uh, changes that occur within the species,
not macroevolution species developed into a completely different species,
which is what most people tend to associate with evolution. Uh, the only major differences
between creationists and evolutionists is that we believe the earth is between six and 10,000 years
old. Um, and again, excluding the outliers and that all organisms were created in their basic
form by our God. Uh, for example, we believe that everyone came from Adam and Eve who through
methods of natural selection evolved into the many nationalities we have today. Same thing
with animals. We believe that a small number of species were created by our God and all the forms
we have today evolved through natural selection. So the only main difference that we have with
evolutionists is the ultimate origin of species. Uh, the areas of evolution that we can see clearly
occurring in front of our eyes. We agree with it's the areas that evolutionists theorize about
that we don't agree with. So while there are differences between creationism and evolution,
there are actually more similarities. And that is Eric from South Bend, Indiana.
Thanks a lot, Eric. Very salient point. Yeah. Biologist. Yeah. I love it when like experts
come out of the, out of the woodwork, especially when they're experts with a twist. Yes. And we
love being refuted and refuting and reading refutations and, uh, we'll always read these
things. Refutation life. That's right. Uh, if you want to refute something we've said or agree
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