Invalid Comparisons of Human and Ape Y Chromosomes

Chromosomes contain a great deal of information, far more than just eye color, height, stature, and all that good stuff. Some of Darwin's disciples decided to compare the Y chromosomes of humans and several types of apes. Although they hailed it as good news for evolution, in reality...it did not go well.

Right from the get-go, errors were happening. For one thing, the source was too big by using several sources of Y chromosome information. Another problem is that the comparisons were between modern humans and apes because of assumed evolution directions.

Human chromosome Y, WikiComm / National Center for Biotechnology Information, U.S. National Library of Medicine (PD) (Usage does not imply endorsement) 
Y chromosomes are difficult to sequence because of repetition, mutations, deletions, and more. Secularists tend to evosplain genetic differences away by assuming evolution did it. Of course, no mechanisms or supporting evidence is offered. Circular reasoning, arbitrary assertions, and self-congratulations abound. Those tinhorns need to cowboy up and realize that faulty science does not negate the work of the Creator.
Some of the most important examples of claimed evidence for the evolution from ape to human are generic comparisons. The chimpanzee–human, last-common ancestor shared by the extant Homo (human) and Pan (chimpanzee and bonobo) genera of Hominini, is estimated to have diverged from five to thirteen million years ago. The difference between these two date estimates is 2.6 times, which reveals that they are more of a guess than an estimate.

The rest of the article is found at "Ape and Human Y Chromosomes Compared."