Question for evolutionists


I have no problem with proof. You're mad because people don't accept what you say is proof because you said it.

You've been educated about how white MEN had to develop the banjo into what it is today because black BOYS didn't have the ability.
 
I have no problem with proof. You're mad because people don't accept what you say is proof because you said it.

You've been educated about how white MEN had to develop the banjo into what it is today because black BOYS didn't have the ability.

Oh I'm not the one saying the banjo is an African instrument.
 
Sure you are. Did someone hack your account and post what's been under your profile?

Sources, learn what they are:






The banjo came to America with the slaves, and musicologists have long looked in West Africa for its predecessors. Much of the speculation has centered on the ngoni and the xalam, two hide-covered stringed instruments from West Africa that bear some resemblance to the banjo. But they're just two of more than 60 similar plucked stringed instruments found in the region.
https://www.npr.org/2011/08/23/13988...s-reconsidered



European explorers encountered the “gourd with neck and strings” on expeditions to Africa, and African slaves brought versions of the instrument to the New World by 1620, several sources have said. Banjo-like instruments proliferated during the days of slavery in America, with early versions made from calabash gourds and animal-skin heads attached with nails or tacks. Some had a flat, fretless neck, and many had three or four strings made of whatever material was at hand.
https://reverb.com/news/a-brief-hist...est-instrument





The banjo is a four-, five-, or six-stringed instrument with a thin membrane stretched over a frame or cavity as a resonator, called the head, which is typically circular. The membrane is typically made of plastic, although animal skin is still occasionally used. Early forms of the instrument were fashioned by Africans in the United States, adapted from African instruments of similar design.[1][2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banjo

That's who's saying it, have a wonderful day.
 
Ok. Your body has a circulatory system. This is used to move oxygen rich blood cells through every part of your body. Now, here's a question for you. A circulatory system is useless without blood. Also, blood has no reason to exist without one. So which came first? Blood or our circulatory system? The answer is neither. They were created at the same time. There is no other rational explanation.

you cant understand these things


life began as single celled life

due to mutations single cells fused into a single example of life


so circulatory system came before blood



just because you don't know or understand science doesn't mean it ceases to exist



this is why you decided long ago to just have FAITH and believe in a god



we don't mind that you do that


Just stop pretending reality isn't real because you cant understand it
 
Neither one of which is a warm-blooded mammal. The question still remains. Blood could not evolve without a circulatory system. A circulatory system could not evolve without blood to circulate. It's a catch-22. You cant have one without the other, and they could not evolve separately.

you are just wrong


we tell you how you are wrong yet you spend your entire life trying to lie your way through the actual facts to prove that life isn't real


give up thinking and JUST HAVE FAITH

your brain capacity is too low to understand facts
 
Yet you're making the excuses and I'm pointing out that's all you do, boy. My focus in life isn't to do that but it's fun when I can. That's becoming a daily activity.






The banjo came to America with the slaves, and musicologists have long looked in West Africa for its predecessors. Much of the speculation has centered on the ngoni and the xalam, two hide-covered stringed instruments from West Africa that bear some resemblance to the banjo. But they're just two of more than 60 similar plucked stringed instruments found in the region.
https://www.npr.org/2011/08/23/13988...s-reconsidered






European explorers encountered the “gourd with neck and strings” on expeditions to Africa, and African slaves brought versions of the instrument to the New World by 1620, several sources have said. Banjo-like instruments proliferated during the days of slavery in America, with early versions made from calabash gourds and animal-skin heads attached with nails or tacks. Some had a flat, fretless neck, and many had three or four strings made of whatever material was at hand.
https://reverb.com/news/a-brief-hist...est-instrument






The banjo is a four-, five-, or six-stringed instrument with a thin membrane stretched over a frame or cavity as a resonator, called the head, which is typically circular. The membrane is typically made of plastic, although animal skin is still occasionally used. Early forms of the instrument were fashioned by Africans in the United States, adapted from African instruments of similar design.[1][2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banjo
 
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