Join us on Real Science Radio as we tackle the myths surrounding the age of the Earth and evolutionary biology. By examining instances like soft tissue in dinosaur fossils and quick cave formation processes, we shed light on paradigm-shifting discoveries that echo strong evidence of design. From the depths of Carlsbad Caverns to the dynamic effects of Mount St. Helens, this episode presents mind-boggling insights that promise to engage and challenge your understanding of science and history.
SPEAKER 03 :
If you’re denying soft tissue, you’re denying reality, and that’s way more dangerous than a communicable disease.
SPEAKER 05 :
Scholars can’t explain it all away. Get ready to be awed by the handiwork of God.
SPEAKER 1 :
Tune into Real Science Radio. Turn up the Real Science Radio.
SPEAKER 05 :
Keepin’ it real.
SPEAKER 02 :
Welcome to Real Science Radio. Doug, it’s good to have you back in the studio.
SPEAKER 03 :
Hey, it’s great to be back in studio, Fred, talking about real science on Friday again with you. And today we’re going to jump into something pretty fascinating. We’ve got a list of 10 things that don’t seem as old as we were all taught back in school.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, so years ago, Bob and I started our list shows. And the very first one we ever did was the list of not so old things. So this list is loaded. There’s over 50 powerful examples that blow holes in the whole deep time story that you hear.
SPEAKER 1 :
50?
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, at least 50. Wow. Yeah. I actually had AI count them. Oh. You think I’m going to go in there and count all that? Yeah. So the mainstream media, the education system, they’ve been pushing deep time, and that’s what most people believe. The vast majority probably believe it. So today, you and I are going to dive into our 10 favorites. So I picked 10 out of there. Well, you picked your share, and I picked my share. And trust me, you’re going to want to buckle up for this one. Buckle up. This is just stuff a lot of people in the YouTube universe have not heard of, or even our radio audience. I think we did a top 10, or we did a list show years ago. I mean, it’s been a while since we’ve done them. So it’s time to get this material out on YouTube.
SPEAKER 03 :
I love it. And I love the title. It’s very Bob Enyart, The List of Not-So-Old Things. Only Bob could come up with that title. And for those of you who like evidence… that makes you rethink the timeline of the earth, you’re going to love this. Our producers will throw up some visuals along the way, help you understand what we’re talking about. Should be a lot of fun. And where do we start, Fred? We have 50 to choose from. What made the very first?
SPEAKER 02 :
The very first one I thought was good to introduce to the audience is rapid finch evolution. Because if you know anything about Darwinism, Darwin started believing in evolution when he… study the finches on the Galapagos Islands.
SPEAKER 03 :
Darwin’s finches are pretty much the sacred icon of evolution that’s introduced to all kids in grade school because kids in grade school like birds. And so Darwin’s finches are iconic. And that’s the story, right?
SPEAKER 02 :
They were supposed to evolve over millions of years.
SPEAKER 03 :
Millions of years, that’s right. That’s what kids are taught. But in recent years, scientists have documented a brand new species of finch appearing in, you got your seatbelt on? Two generations.
SPEAKER 02 :
Two. Two! Not like a zillion to get it to millions of years old. That’s right. Two generations. Unless birds have a generation of like 100,000 years. No. I don’t think they do.
SPEAKER 03 :
No, they don’t hang around that long. Individuals from a single finch species on a U.S. bird reservation in the Pacific were introduced to a group of small islands 300 miles away at most in 17 years. Like Darwin’s finches, they have diversified their beaks, have adapted related muscles, their behavior has adapted to fill various ecological niches in at most 17 years.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, so that doesn’t sound like slow, gradual evolution to me. And it’s right there, the Galapagos Islands that Darwin championed. So this is instead obviously strong evidence for design that God programmed into birds the ability, into all animal life, right, the ability to adapt to their ecological zone, their environment, and that’s what we see here. So beaks changing size, this and that, that’s not evolution as you would think it. It’s small-scale adaptation.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, and it’s not mutation. It’s adaptation. Exactly. Very good. Now, next, opals. Opals, okay. Opals, right? Now, and this really surprised me, just how quickly opals can form. And now, we don’t want you to be confused with the Buick opal, which was formed from about 1968 to 1973 in North America, and then that particular opal pretty much died off.
SPEAKER 02 :
What we’re talking about – I had never heard of that. You showed that picture to me. I’m like, I heard of the Javelin, a lot of really bad cars. So this thing was, what, German or something?
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, it was a German company owned by General Motors. And I just remember I thought it was a really neat-looking car when I was five or six years old. Wasn’t that back when it was General Motors? Lieutenant Colonel Motors. That was a while back. But my dad made fun of this car because he looked at it as another milestone of America becoming like Europe. Gas prices had gone crazy and they brought these little tiny cars. And my dad, I think he felt that masculinity was being insulted. But with these ugly little cars, I thought it was pretty cool. But That was the Buick Opal. But we’re talking about a different type of Opal. We’re talking about the amorphous silica mineraloid that you find digging in the dirt in the earth. And we’ve been told that they take hundreds of thousands of years, maybe millions of years to form. But it turns out they can form in just weeks or months under the right conditions. And that’s not just surprising. It’s a game changer for geological dating models. I mean, a leading authority on opals, Alan W. Eckert, observed that, quote, scientific papers and textbooks saying that the process of opal formation requires tens of thousands of years, perhaps hundreds of thousands. Not true.
SPEAKER 02 :
And there’s a 2011 peer reviewed paper in a geology journal from Australia where almost all of the world’s opals are found. I didn’t know that. Yeah. So it’s reported in that journal that. The new timetable for opal formation involving weeks to a few months and not the hundreds of thousands of years envisioned by the conventional weathering model. And then apparently there’s, per a 2019 report, from entomology today, opals can even form around insects. Unless those insects are millions of years old or hundreds of thousands of years old, it’s just not going to happen, Doug.
SPEAKER 03 :
No, it’s wild. And I was doing a little research on opals. I didn’t know this. Opals were valuable in the ancient world until I think it was the 1800s. These vast quantities of opals were uncovered in Australia. And the world global opal market just went down through the cellar because all of a sudden… These rare minerals that everyone thought were really valuable, turns out they formed every 15 minutes in Australia. And they’re just boatloads of them now. And they’re not all that valuable anymore. Although some of the unique colored opals can still be pretty valuable.
SPEAKER 02 :
But they form pretty quickly. It reminds me of the Banggai Cardinal. So that’s a fish that used to be real expensive in saltwater. You go to a saltwater store and they’re super expensive. This would be actually before I got into… you know, being a saltwater aquarium enthusiast. Yeah. They were super expensive. And then they found a boatload of them off of Hawaii and the price just plummeted. Now it’s one of the cheapest fishes you can buy. It’s up. The one I get is it’s a black and white one. I call it my Al Davis fish because it’s the Raiders and it’s got a grumpy look on it for those who remember Al Davis, but same kind of thing. All of a sudden you have so much of it. It’s not so rare anymore and it’s not so expensive. In fact, it’s dirt cheap. So Doug, number three, I’m looking at you right now. I’m trying to see. I can’t tell. Do you have blue eyes? Sometimes. I have light colored eyes. Yeah, they look like they’re almost blue.
SPEAKER 03 :
Sometimes they can be blue. It kind of depends on the hue of the light in the room. Yeah, I’m considered blue eyes. I’m not considered brown eyed.
SPEAKER 02 :
Okay.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah.
SPEAKER 02 :
Well, this is number three on our list, where blue eyes come from.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah. And it turns out all blue-eyed people are believed to come from a single genetic mutation that occurred just 6,000 to 10,000 years ago. Yeah, and probably this was a mutation because having light-colored eyes is actually not beneficial. Interesting. Yeah, because if you have dark irises, I learned this from Bob Enyart driving from Montana. We were driving from Montana, and everything was white because it was December and it was snow. And first thing in the morning, I start driving, and I’m like… I’m driving along, and Bob looks at me, and he’s like, Doug, I don’t want to die. He said, maybe you should pull over. Why don’t you take a nap, and I’ll drive for a while. He said, I feel great. And I said, yeah, I don’t know what it is, Bob. This white is just really killing me. He said, it’s because of your light eyes. He said, I have dark brown eyes, so it doesn’t bother me as much.
SPEAKER 02 :
So, Doug, I know you’re in the medical field, so you probably would know more about that than a lot of people would. I don’t know if you’ve ever dealt with treatments for eyes.
SPEAKER 03 :
Uh, well, not for, not for eyes specifically, but I did learn about this mutation. It seems to me it’s a mutation, like I say, because it doesn’t seem to be helpful for those of us who have lighter colored eyes.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yep. So from science daily, they report that research shows that people with blue eyes have a single common ancestor. A team at the university of Copenhagen have tracked down a genetic mutation, which took place six to 10,000 years ago and is the cause of eye color. Of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today, six to 10,000 years? Yeah, yeah. Isn’t that a number commonly used by Christians? Yeah. Based on genealogies and different theories on how you add them all up. Yeah. You get somewhere between six, I say six to 7,000 years because I’m kind of more on the Henry Smith side of…
SPEAKER 03 :
Yep, that’s where I fall.
SPEAKER 02 :
The great interview you had with Henry Smith last year.
SPEAKER 03 :
Six to seven thousand. I’m not willing to give him more than seven myself.
SPEAKER 02 :
Bob is always a six to ten guy.
SPEAKER 03 :
We’ll find out someday. Bob was being graceful, offering grace. But that is a pretty short time frame, especially when you think about the massive population of blue-eyed folks today. I mean, when you look around… And I’ve just noticed this in the sales field, is that almost all salesmen are blue-eyed. Almost all. I mean, white guys, anyways. If it’s a white guy, he’s got blue eyes. I don’t know what it is, but it’s something about… So the mutation made him shifty and shady as well. Anyway. But, yeah, 6,000 to 10,000 years traced back to one guy, and so we owe our blue eyes to this one Nordic, I’m sure, Swedish guy or something.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, there you go. Well, speaking of mutations, so most human mutations are recent. This is item number four.
SPEAKER 03 :
That’s right. That’s right. And speaking of humans, right, geneticists say that most of the mutations we carry today occurred in just the last 200 generations, and that’s 4,000 to 5,000 years if you’re counting by generations. And that sure sounds like a biblical timeline to me, Fred. Not a march of progress of millions of millions of years.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, that’s right. And you know what’s related to this topic is one of my favorites, and it’s always been this 6,000-year-old mitochondrial leave. I mean, this is what was reported in science magazines. They quote 6,000-year-old mitochondrial leave. So Ann Gibbons wrote about this finding. She said, regardless of the cause, evolutionists are most concerned about the effect of a faster mutation rate. For example, researchers have calculated that mitochondrial leave, the woman whose mitochondrial DNA was ancestral to that in all living people, lived 100,000 to 200,000 years ago in Africa, but then they, using the new clock, this is what she said, she would be a mere 6,000 years old. The very next sentence, by the way, she says, no one thinks that’s the case. Oh yeah, of course. I’m pretty sure us young earth creationists have thought that was the case, made that prediction, and said this is what the kind of science is actually going to reveal. So how do they get the number back to 200,000 years? They mix back in chimp DNA. Which is circular reasoning. They assume evolution, so they say, oh, you evolved from chimp-like ancestors, so let’s get that DNA back in there and get this number back to 100,000 or 200,000 years because we don’t want people to believe in the Bible. But this is what the science shows. This is so cool.
SPEAKER 03 :
Mitochondrial Eve should have been one of the bombshell scientific discoveries of the century. It should have been. Yeah. But it was an early example of bias, fake news, fake science. Yeah, it was all of that.
SPEAKER 02 :
Propaganda.
SPEAKER 03 :
It’s been going on for quite some time. Yeah, we do think it’s the case. We go with 6,000 years for mitochondrial relief. In fact, we go with the name Eve, too. We do, yeah, exactly.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, we definitely got that part right. So number five, right in the middle of our list, we went ahead and stuck dinosaur soft tissue. It’s probably number one for most people because it’s the most powerful argument that you can use. You know, Abby, in my interview with Abby with her interactions with college students, this is the one she would always bring up, and nobody knows about it, even though even Harvard and Stanford’s on board. And Abby shared this long list that we’ve got of soft tissue that they’ve discovered, and not only dinosaurs, but other creatures, even trilobites. Binding collagen and this stuff in trilobites. So anyways, there’s no way this stuff can be millions of years old. Well, that’s what you say, but nobody believes that.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, soft tissue and dinosaur bones. The fact that Abby’s circle of influence are clueless about it, it proves that a successful propaganda campaign can be run against real science. Because soft tissue and dinosaur bones… Talk about a bombshell. I mean, that’s the bombshell of the century.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, the bombshell of bombshells.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, absolutely. And it’s astonishing that college-educated people are unaware of it, completely unaware of it. Oh, yeah. Which, that’s not really their fault. That’s someone’s fault. That’s the education system. I mean, you can’t blame a young kid because he didn’t get the information. Somebody’s hiding that information, and, well, we’ve been trying to get it out for years. That was one of Bob’s passions was to spread the word about dino soft tissue.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, and one of the people that Abby mentioned, she had a Discord conversation with him. Well, he turns out he’s one of these STDers. You know, STD, person with STD, an STDer? It’s not a TDS, which is Trump Drain Syndrome, which maybe they have that too. Okay. But you know an STDer.
SPEAKER 03 :
You’d have to enlighten me on that, Fred. I know nothing about anything at all to do.
SPEAKER 02 :
Bob came up with this term, soft tissue denier.
SPEAKER 05 :
That’s right, soft tissue denier.
SPEAKER 1 :
Okay. Okay.
SPEAKER 02 :
So that’s what we have.
SPEAKER 03 :
Fred, I’m in the medical field. You know that. And so you throw STD at me, and I’m like, Fred, I didn’t think we were going to go there on the show. Okay, a soft tissue denier, which is worse even because there’s no cure for that. If you’re denying soft tissue, you’re denying reality, and that’s way more dangerous than a communicable disease.
SPEAKER 02 :
We should start a business to help these people. We help… TDSers, STDers.
SPEAKER 03 :
If we can go, we’ll come up with one more acronym and we’ve got it. I’m all for that, Fred. Let’s get it up there.
SPEAKER 02 :
So it was really cool. Scientists, they found, you know, again, stretchy blood vessels, cells, and proteins, and even DNA in these fossil, the so-called fossilized bones, fossilized. And you’re even finding DNA. So it’s what Discover Magazine called a dangerous discovery.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes. Schweitzer’s dangerous discovery.
SPEAKER 02 :
She erased the line between past and present. So this has been reported on. Just not enough people know about it.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah. Well, with Mary Schweitzer, it goes back to 2006, 2007. That’s almost 20 years.
SPEAKER 01 :
Yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
She was on 60 Minutes. Yeah. I mean, talk about that. That should have been a bombshell. They don’t mention it in the schools. No, no. Learning all this stuff. You would think that any college kid, high school kid would ask, how do you preserve biological material like blood vessels and blood cells and collagen? How do you preserve it for that long? Because you don’t.
SPEAKER 02 :
That tissue should have turned to dust ages ago. And that’s why you need to subscribe to our channel because you hear a lot of real science and you’re going to hear a lot of the truth, stuff you haven’t been hearing. So now here’s your opportunity. Subscribe to our channel. You’ll get this kind of stuff all the time.
SPEAKER 03 :
That’s right. We will link to sources, source material, mainstream media, scientific, peer-reviewed journals. Credible, I say credible, I use that in quotation marks, but accredited universities where this soft tissue is documented. This is real and should have been the most earth-shattering discovery in paleontology ever. Absolutely.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah. Doug, number six is Mount St. Helens.
SPEAKER 03 :
Oh, yes. Fast geology. Mount St. Helens. I hear it’s rumbling again. The Northwest is rumbling again. And so Mount St. Helens basically is like a living science lab after the eruption in 1980. We watched entire canyons and layers of rock carved and formed, not in eons, not even in years, but in days, over a weekend, over a fortnight.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, and you know, if there were aliens and they plunked down on our planet… And they ran through our education system for even just six months. They’d come out and they’d go, oh, look at those layers, millions of years here and here and here. And this took millions of years to form. It’s like, oh, sorry, dude, this just happened in days, not even weeks.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, that’s right.
SPEAKER 02 :
A canyon carved out by water with a little river running down the bottom of it. Yeah. Oh, no, that carved that out pebble by pebble over millions of years.
SPEAKER 03 :
No. Yeah, it happened over about a two-week period. And then, of course, one of Bob’s iconic statements, remember the nautiloids. Remember the nautiloids, right? In the Grand Canyon, there’s a limestone layer averaging seven feet thick, that runs the 277 miles of the canyon and beyond that covers hundreds of square miles and contains an average of one nautiloid fossil per square meter along with many many many other dead creatures all in this one particular layer 15% of these nautiloids were killed and then fossilized standing on their heads vertically. Like, standing up on their heads vertically. Did they stand there for a million and a half years? No. It happened catastrophically, similar to what happened with Mount St. Helens. Yeah.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, the fact that they’re standing on their heads, you know? Yeah. It’s not like they just plunked there in the millions of years they got buried with them standing on their heads. No. That’d be quite the trick. So number seven, Doug, is cave formations that don’t take ages. Oh, caves. Yeah, because caves look old. Yeah. Caves definitely look old. And we’re talking about the stalactites and stalagmites.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah.
SPEAKER 02 :
And we’ve always been told for many years, we were told how they take thousands of years to form.
SPEAKER 03 :
That’s right. But now we see that they form under bridges that were not built millions of years ago. They form in mines and even in old pipes and they form in just decades. Yes.
SPEAKER 02 :
And so before we get to more on this, Doug, this is the number seven. So that means we’re kind of, since we’re halfway through this, we’re in the seventh inning stretch.
SPEAKER 03 :
The seventh inning stretch. I like it. We get to relax.
SPEAKER 02 :
And so what we’re going to do with the seventh inning stretch is we’re going to practice this. Here we go. It’s time for the interesting part of the week. Okay. Are you ready, Doug?
SPEAKER 03 :
Everybody’s ready. Everyone’s on the edge of their seat, including me.
SPEAKER 02 :
Okay. Think of the periodic table. What is the symbol for iron? The symbol for iron.
SPEAKER 03 :
I know this. I know this because I’ve needed to know this before and I knew it before. The symbol for iron. Ah, this is gonna be so embarrassing when you say it because I know it. It’s not R-O.
SPEAKER 02 :
The first letter is F. F-A.
SPEAKER 03 :
Okay, wait, give me 25 more tries. I’ll get it. It’s a vowel. It’s a vowel?
SPEAKER 1 :
Yeah. F-A-E-I-O-U-F-E.
SPEAKER 02 :
There you go.
SPEAKER 05 :
I knew it before. I knew it before.
SPEAKER 02 :
I won’t buzz you on this next one, but do you remember the atomic number? Oh, there’s protons, you know.
SPEAKER 03 :
There’s no way I know that. You might as well just buzz me. Well, I won’t buzz you on that one. Have mercy on me.
SPEAKER 02 :
It’s 26. Okay, all right. All right, okay, so back to cave formations.
SPEAKER 03 :
Wait, wait, is there a reason it’s Effie? Did they just do that by… Is it because it’s a Ferris?
SPEAKER 02 :
I don’t know, maybe Jack and the Beanstalk, maybe that giant came across… You know, some iron, and they said fee.
SPEAKER 03 :
So we’re going to have to look into how they came up with that periodic table. If you’re not buying that one. Well, I don’t know if they did it just to punk me.
SPEAKER 02 :
If you know why they came up with FE, I’m not sure if we’ll remember to look that up. So leave it in the comments. We do try to read the comments. We don’t respond a lot. We do when we can.
SPEAKER 03 :
If you help us figure out FE, we will respond.
SPEAKER 02 :
We’ll at least like it.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, absolutely. Okay, now back to the caves.
SPEAKER 02 :
Back to the caves. Have you been to Carlsbad Caverns? I went there as a kid. Is that right? Yeah, to Colorado. We were driving to see my uncle in Texas and went to Carlsbad Caverns. Yes. Went in there. I don’t remember it much because I was maybe seven, eight years old, but have you been there?
SPEAKER 03 :
We went on our 8th grade field trip, we went to Carlsbad Caverns, and it was pretty spectacular, I must say, because I was, well, 8th grade, I don’t know, 12, 13, I mean, I was old enough to be aware. And it was pretty impressive, and of course, we got the whole… evolutionary timeline spiel as the tour guide took us through there. It was 8th grade science class field trip.
SPEAKER 02 :
I thought you might have been there because you lived near there, right? Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, we lived out in the middle of nowhere out in West Texas. Carlsbad Caverns was the closest interesting thing, which that’s pretty bad when you’re… The closest interesting thing is Carlsbad Caverns. You know you’re in the middle of nowhere.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, exactly. So the National Park Service repeatedly changed the sign at the cave entrance… Which, according to the U.S. forest geologist Jerry Trout, at first it claimed that the formation took 260 million years. Uh-huh. And then it went down to 8 million years. Wow.
SPEAKER 03 :
Okay, that’s pretty dramatic.
SPEAKER 02 :
And then it got down to 2 million years. I mean, this is really second fast. And then finally they got tired of doing that. They just took the sign down altogether. Yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
They thought it was going to become obvious that they were just making stuff up. Exactly. Just please.
SPEAKER 02 :
And if you want documentation on that, go to youngearth.com. It’s a great website for all things that show that the Earth is not that old. It’s young. I’ve always said I think the Earth is old because 6,000 years is really old. That’s a long time, yeah. Major codger status.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, 6,000 years is old. And then, you know, people talk about it’s unreasonable to think that God could have created everything in six days. And I’m thinking, well, wait a second. He is the Almighty God with all power, all knowledge, and it took him six days. I mean, that seems like a lot of time to invest for the Almighty God. So it was a big job. It took six days. Six days is a, hey, after six days, I need a break.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, there’s a lot of stuff in six days. In 6,000 years, that’s pretty old. So here’s a cool one, Doug. Petrified wood in months. Ah, yes, petrified wood. In months. Now, wait a minute, that’s not millions of years? Because everybody, when they see petrified wood, they just think super old ancient, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, that’s what I was taught in eighth grade science class before we went off to Carlsbad Caverns. The one thing they made sure we knew was that petrified wood formed over millions of years. Of course. But researchers have duplicated petrification in months under the right chemical conditions. It’s fast. There are some Japanese scientists… who’ve proved creationist research and published their results in the peer-reviewed journal Sedimentary Geology, showing that wood can and does petrify rapidly. Modern wood significantly petrified in 36 years. These researchers concluded that wood buried in strata could have been petrified in a, quote, fairly short period of time in the order of several tens to hundreds of years. Yeah.
SPEAKER 02 :
So let’s stop adding three or four zeros at the end of that. So next time you see Petrified Trees audience, and if you’re new to Real Science Radio and you’ve believed all this stuff of the Earth being billions and billions of years old and the universe being billions and millions, There’s so much evidence against that. And so don’t let the brainwashing kick in. We’re trying to get you past that brainwashing that occurred at public school. I went through the same thing. I believed this stuff for 30 years of my life. I got mad in a way. I was frustrated. How did I let myself get brainwashed? You’re not exposed to this evidence against this brainwashing. Well, now you are. That’s right. Real science radio. That’s right. Don’t think millions of years in Jurassic things. Think recent and a lot of stuff.
SPEAKER 03 :
Sure, at least be willing to question the orthodoxy. And that takes us to squid ink. Squid ink, right?
SPEAKER 02 :
Basically still wet.
SPEAKER 03 :
Right, still wet squid ink that was supposedly… How old was the squid ink that they… They claim that the squid, the particular fossil, was 150…
SPEAKER 02 :
million years old. Now that’s old. That’s a long time for ink not to dry.
SPEAKER 03 :
150 million year old squid and you could still write with the ink. They were able to draw it up into a writing instrument and actually draw. Now, we don’t know that they put this on udon noodles and ate it like my wife does with squid ink, which is really weird to see somebody put black ink on noodles and then eat it. So we don’t know that we would have recommended that you eat this ink. People actually eat the ink? Yeah. I did not know that. It’s considered something of a delicacy. I always learn something new on Real Science Radio.
SPEAKER 01 :
That’s right. Hey, we’re running out of time in this broadcast, so go to our website to catch the rest of this program, realsignsradio.com.
SPEAKER 04 :
Scholars can’t explain it all away.
SPEAKER 05 :
Get ready to be awed by the handiwork of God.
SPEAKER 1 :
Tune in to Real Science Radio. Turn up the Real Science Radio. Keeping it real.
SPEAKER 05 :
That’s what I’m talking about.