Dinosaur-to-Bird Evolution Refuted by Breathing?

It is considered a fact by many evolutionists that dinosaurs evolved into birds, so that canned chicken in my pantry is actually evolved dinosaur. As baryon-to-bird evolution is dogma in the secular science industry, dissenters are downplayed. The same happens to dinosaur-to-bird evolution deniers.

As seen in "Non-Science in Dinosaur-to-Bird Evolution," there are numerous problems with those stories. Indeed, serious scientific difficulties should have stopped the concept right away. Many scientists believe despite the evidence. One major problem is that birds and reptiles breathe differently.

Confuciusornis, Flickr / paleobear (CC BY 2.0)
Reptiles, many animals, humans all breathe with a bellows (draw in, push out) style, although they are not all designed alike. Birds have more of a flow-through system. That means dinosaurs would have had to evolve countless transitions — any of which would have been stopped by natural selection, so evolution could not happen. Lung systems had to be created so they worked the right way from the get-go. There is also an evolution-killing fact regarding how the location of the thigh bone is essential to bird breathing.
Do we eat Kentucky Fried Dinosaur? According to the dogma of many evolutionary propagandists for the last decade or so, indeed we do—they believe that birds evolved from the carnivorous dinosaur group known as theropods. Yet there are many problems with this idea. Research into the birds’ lung and leg anatomy provides more strong evidence against it.

To be amazed by the rest of the article, click on "Bird breathing anatomy breaks dino-to-bird dogma."