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			by 
			
            
			Lloyd Pye  
			
			Extracted from
			
			Nexus Magazine, 
			Volume 10, Number 1 (Dec ’02-Jan 2003) 
  
			
				
					
						
						Contents 
					 
				 
			 
			
				
					
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			 
			An overlooked explanation for why the fossil record shows primitive 
			and complex life appearing suddenly on Earth, with no predecessors, 
			is extraterrestrial intervention. 
			 
			Since writing my first essay for NEXUS in mid-2002 [see 9/04], I’ve 
			been bombarded by emails (nearing 200) from around the world, many 
			offering congratulations (always appreciated, of course) and many 
			others requesting more instruction or deeper insight into areas 
			discussed and/or not discussed. 
			 
			Let’s face it: nearly everyone is interested in Darwinism, 
			Creationism, Intelligent Design, and the new kid in town, 
			Interventionism. Because of length constraints, this essay must be 
			in two parts. Here, in Part One, I’ll go over the basics currently 
			known about the origin of life on Earth. Later, in Part Two, I’ll 
			discuss what is known and what can be safely surmised about the 
			origin of humanity. 
			 
			We begin by understanding that Charles Darwin stood on a very 
			slippery slope when trying to explain how something as biologically 
			and biochemically complex as even the simplest form of life could 
			have spontaneously generated itself from organic molecules and 
			compounds loose in the early Earth’s environment. Because that part 
			of Darwin’s theory has always been glaringly specious, modern 
			Darwinists get hammered about it from all sides, including from the 
			likes of me, with a net result that the edifice of "authority" 
			they’ve hidden behind for 140 years is crumbling under the assault. 
			 
			Imagine a mediaeval castle being pounded by huge stones flung by 
			primitive, but cumulatively effective, catapults. Darwinism (and all 
			that term has come to represent: natural selection, evolution, 
			survival of the fittest, punctuated equilibrium, etc.) is the 
			castle; Darwinists man the battlements as the lobbed stones do their 
			work; Intelligent Designers hurl the boulders doing the most damage; 
			Creationists, by comparison, use slings; and the relatively few 
			(thus far) people like me, Interventionists, shoot a well-aimed 
			arrow now and then, though nobody pays much attention to us yet. 
			 
			Remember, a well-aimed (or lucky--in either case, the example is 
			instructive) arrow took down mighty Achilles. Darwinists have heels, 
			too. 
			 
			LIFE, OR SOMETHING LIKE IT 
			In Charles Darwin’s time, nothing was known about life at the 
			cellular level. Protoplasm was the smallest unit they understood. 
			Yet Darwin’s theory of natural selection stated that all of 
			life--every living entity known then or to be discovered in the 
			future--simply had to function from birth to death by "natural laws" 
			that could be defined and analyzed. This would of course include the 
			origin of life. Darwin suggested life might have gradually assembled 
			itself from stray parts lying about in some "warm pond" when the 
			planet had cooled enough to make such an assemblage possible. Later 
			it was realized that nothing would likely have taken shape 
			(gradually or otherwise) in a static environment, so a catalytic 
			element was added: lightning. 
			 
			Throughout history up to the present moment, scientists have been 
			forced to spend their working lives with the "God" of 
			the 
			Creationists hovering over every move they make, every mistake, 
			every error in judgment, every personal peccadillo. So when faced 
			with something they can’t explain in rational terms, the only 
			alternative option is "God did it", which for them is unacceptable. 
			So they’re forced by relentless Creationist pressure to come up with 
			answers for absolutely everything that, no matter how absurd, are 
			"natural". That was their motivation for the theory that a lightning 
			bolt could strike countless random molecules in a warm pond and 
			somehow transform them into the first living creature. The "natural" 
			forces of biology, chemistry and electromagnetism could magically be 
			swirled together --and voilà!, an event suspiciously close to a 
			miracle. 
			 
			Needless to say, no Darwinist would accept terms like "magic" or 
			"miracle", which would be tantamount to agreeing with the 
			Creationist argument that "God did it all". But in their 
			heart-of-hearts, even the most fanatical Darwinists had to suspect 
			the "warm pond" theory was absurd. 
			 
			And as more and more was learned about the mind-boggling complexity 
			of cellular structure and chemistry, there could be no doubt. The 
			trenchant Fred Hoyle analogy still stands: it was as likely to be 
			true as that a tornado could sweep through a junkyard and correctly 
			assemble a jetliner. 
			 
			Unfortunately, the "warm pond" had become a counterbalance to "God 
			did it", so even when Darwinists knew past doubt that it was wrong, 
			they clung to it, outwardly proclaimed it and taught it. In many 
			places in the world, including the USA, it’s still taught. 
			 
			TOO HOT TO HANDLE 
			The next jarring bump on the Darwinist road to embattlement came 
			when they learned that in certain places around the globe there 
			existed remnants of what had to be the very first pieces of the 
			Earth’s crust. Those most ancient slabs of rock are called cratons, 
			and the story of their survival for 4.0 billion [4,000,000,000] 
			years is a miracle in itself. But what is most miraculous about them 
			is that they contain fossils of "primitive" bacteria!   Yes,
			bacteria, 
			preserved in 4.0-billion-year-old cratonal rock. If that’s not 
			primitive, what is? However, it presented Darwinists with an 
			embarrassing conundrum. 
			 
			If Earth began to coalesce out of the solar system’s primordial 
			cloud of dust and gas around 4.5 billion years ago (which by then 
			was a well-supported certainty), then at 4.0 billion years ago the 
			proto-planet was still a seething ball of cooling magma. No warm 
			ponds would appear on Earth for at least a billion years or more. So 
			how to reconcile reality with the warm-pond fantasy? 
			
			 
			There was no way to reconcile it, so it was ignored by all but the 
			specialists who had to work with it on a daily basis. Every other 
			Darwinist assumed a position as one of the "see no evil, speak no 
			evil, hear no evil" monkeys. To say they "withheld" the new, 
			damaging information is not true; to say it was never emphasized in 
			the popular media for public consumption is true. 
			 
			That has become the way Darwinists handle any and all challenges to 
			their pet theories: if they can no longer defend one, they don’t 
			talk about it, or they talk about it as little as possible. If 
			forced to talk about it, they invariably try to "kill the messenger" 
			by challenging any critic’s "credentials". If the critic lacks 
			academic credentials equal to their own, he or she is dismissed as 
			little more than a crackpot. If the critic has equal credentials, he 
			or she is labeled as a "closet Creationist" and dismissed. No 
			career scientist can speak openly and vociferously against Darwinist 
			dogma without paying a heavy price. That is why and how people of 
			normally good conscience can be and have been "kept in line" and 
			kept silent in the face of egregious distortions of truth. 
			 
			If that system of merciless censure weren’t so solidly in place, 
			then surely the next Darwinist stumble would have made headlines 
			around the world as the final and absolute end to the ridiculous 
			notion that life could possibly have assembled itself "naturally". 
			They couldn’t even be sure it happened on Earth. 
			 
			TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE 
			The imposing edifice of Darwinian "origin of life" dogma rested on a 
			piece of incontrovertible bedrock: there could be only one 
			progenitor for all of life. When the fortuitous lightning bolt 
			struck the ideally concocted warm pond, it created only one entity. 
			However, it was no ordinary entity. With it came the multiple 
			ability to take nourishment from its environment, create energy from 
			that nourishment, expel waste created by the use of that energy and 
			(almost as an afterthought) reproduce itself ad infinitum until one 
			of its millions of subsequent generations sits here at this moment 
			reading these words. Nothing miraculous about that; simply 
			incalculable good fortune. 
			 
			This was Darwinist gospel --preached and believed-- until the bacteria 
			fossils were found in the cratons. Their discovery was upsetting, 
			but not a deathblow to the Darwinist theory. They had to concede 
			(among themselves, of course) that the first life-form didn’t 
			assemble itself in a warm pond, but it came together somehow because 
			every ancient fossil it spawned was a single-celled bacteria lacking 
			a cell nucleus (prokaryotes). Prokaryotes preceded the much later 
			single-celled bacteria with a nucleus (eukaryotes), so the 
			post-craton 
			situation stayed well within the Darwinian framework. No matter how 
			the first life-form came into existence, it was a single unit 
			lacking a cell nucleus, which was mandatory because even the 
			simplest nucleus would be much too "irreducibly complex" (a 
			favorite Intelligent Design phrase) to be created by a lightning 
			bolt tearing through a warm pond’s molecular junkyard. So the 
			Darwinists still held half a loaf. 
			 
			In the mid-1980s, however, biologist Carl Woese stunned his 
			colleagues with a shattering discovery. There wasn’t just the 
			predicted (and essential) single source for all forms of life; there 
			were two: two types of prokaryotic bacteria as distinct as apples 
			and oranges, dogs and cats, horses and cows, two distinct forms of 
			life, alive and well on the planet at 4.0 billion years ago. 
			Unmistakable. Irrefutable. Get over it. Deal with it. 
			 
			But how? How to explain separate forms of life springing into 
			existence in an environment that would make hell seem like a summer 
			resort? With nothing but cooling lava as far as an incipient eye 
			might have seen, how could it be explained in "natural" terms? 
			Indeed, how could it be explained in any terms other than the 
			totally unacceptable? Life, with all its deepening mystery, had to 
			have been seeded onto Earth. 
			 
			PANSPERMIA RAISES ITS UGLY HEAD 
			Panspermia is the idea that life came to be on Earth from somewhere 
			beyond the planet and possibly beyond the solar system. Its means of 
			delivery is separated into two possible avenues: directed and 
			undirected. 
			
			 
			Undirected panspermia means that life came here entirely by accident 
			and was delivered by a comet or meteor. Some scientists favor 
			comets as the prime vector because they contain ice mixed with dust 
			(comets are often referred to as "dirty snowballs"), and life is 
			more likely to have originated in water and is more likely to 
			survive an interstellar journey frozen. Other scientists favor 
			asteroids as the delivery mechanism because they are more likely to 
			have come from the body of a planet that would have contained life. 
			A comet, they argue, is unlikely ever to have been part of a planet, 
			and life could not possibly have generated itself in or on a frozen 
			comet. 
			 
			Directed panspermia means life was delivered to Earth by intelligent 
			means of one kind or another. In one scenario, a capsule could have 
			been sent here the same way we sent Voyager on an interstellar 
			mission. However, if it was sent from outside the solar system, we 
			have to wonder how the senders might have known Earth was here, or 
			how Earth managed to get in the way of something sent randomly (à la 
			Voyager). 
			 
			In another scenario, interstellar craft manned by extraterrestrial 
			beings could have arrived and delivered the two prokaryote types. 
			This requires a level of openmindedness that most scientists 
			resolutely lack, so they won’t accept either version of directed panspermia as even remotely possible. Instead, they cling to their 
			"better" explanation of undirected panspermia because it 
			allows them 
			to continue playing the "origin" game within the first boundaries 
			set out by Charles Darwin: undirected is "natural"; directed is 
			"less natural". 
			 
			Notice it can’t be said that directed panspermia is "unnatural". 
			According to Darwinists, no matter where life originated, the 
			process was natural from start to finish. All they have to concede 
			is that it didn’t take place on Earth. However, acknowledging that 
			forces them to skirt dangerously close to admitting the reality of 
			extraterrestrial life, and their ongoing "search" for such life 
			generates millions in research funding each year. This leaves them 
			in no hurry to make clear to the general public that, yes, beyond 
			Earth there is at the very least the same primitive bacterial life 
			we have here. There’s no doubt about it. But, as usual, they keep 
			the lid on this reality, not exactly hiding it but making no effort 
			to educate the public to the notion that we are not, and never have 
			been, alone. The warm pond still holds water, so why muddy it with 
			facts? 
			 
			A PATTERN EMERGES 
			In my book, 
			
			Everything You Know Is Wrong, I discuss all points 
			mentioned up to now, which very few people outside academic circles 
			are aware of. Within those circles, a hard core of "true believers" 
			still seizes on every new discovery of a chemical or organic 
			compound found in space to try to move the argument back to Darwin’s 
			original starting point that somehow life assembled itself on Earth 
			"naturally". 
			 
			However, most objective scholars now accept that the first forms of 
			life had to have been delivered because: 
			 
			
				
				(1)   they appear as two 
			groups of multiple prokaryotes (archaea and 
				true bacteria) 
				
				(2)   they 
			appear whole and complete 
				
				(3)   the hellish primordial Earth is 
			unimaginable as an incubator for burgeoning life 
				
				(4)   a 
			half-billion years seems far too brief a time-span to permit a 
			gradual, step-by-step assembly of the incredible complexity of 
			prokaryotic biology and biochemistry 
			 
			
			Even more damaging to the hard-core Darwinist position is that the 
			prokaryotes were --quite propitiously-- as durable as life gets. They 
			were virtually indestructible, able to live in absolutely any 
			environment--and they’ve proved it by being here today, looking and 
			behaving the same as when their ancestors were fossilized 4.0 
			billion years ago. Scalding heat? We love it! Choked by saline? Let 
			us at it! Frozen solid? We’re there! Crushing pressure? Perfect for 
			us! Corrosively acidic? Couldn’t be better! 
			 
			Today they are known as extremophiles, and they exist alongside many 
			other prokaryotic bacteria that thrive in milder conditions. It 
			would appear that those milder-living prokaryotes could not have 
			survived on primordial Earth, so how did they come to be? According 
			to Darwinists, they "evolved" from extremophiles in the same way 
			humans supposedly evolved on a parallel track with apes --from a 
			"common ancestor". 
			 
			Darwinists contend such parallel tracks don’t need to be traceable. 
			All that’s required is a creature looking reasonably like another to 
			establish what they consider a legitimate claim of evolutionary 
			connection. Extremophiles clearly existed: we have their 
			4.0-billion-year-old fossils. Their descendants clearly exist today, 
			along with mild-environment prokaryotes that must have descended 
			from them. However, transitional forms between them cannot be found, 
			even though such forms are required by the tenets of Darwinism. 
			Faced with that embarrassing problem, Darwinists simply insist that 
			the missing transitional species do exist, still hidden somewhere in 
			the fossil record, just as the "missing link" between apes and 
			humans is out there somewhere and will indeed be discovered someday. 
			It’s simply a matter of being in the right place at the right time. 
			 
			For as expedient as the "missing link" has been, it’s useless to 
			explain the next phase of life on Earth, when prokaryotes began 
			sharing the stage with the much larger and much more complex (but 
			still single-celled) eukaryotes, which appear around 2.0 billion 
			years ago. The leap from prokaryote to eukaryote is too vast even to 
			pretend a missing evolutionary link could account for it. A dozen 
			would be needed just to cover going from no nucleus to one that 
			functions fully. (This, by the way, is also true of the leap between 
			so-called pre-humans and humans, which will be discussed in Part 
			Two). 
			 
			How to explain it? Certainly not plausibly. Fortunately, Darwinists 
			have never lacked the creativity to invent "warm-pond" scenarios to 
			plug holes in their dogma. 
			 
			DOING THE DOGMA SHUFFLE 
			Since it’s clear that a "missing link" won’t fly over the 
			prokaryote-eukaryote chasm, why not assume some of the smaller 
			prokaryotes were eaten by some of the larger ones? Yeah, that might 
			work! But instead of turning into food, energy and waste, the small 
			ones somehow turn themselves--or get turned into--cell nuclei for 
			larger ones. Sure, that’s a keeper! Since no one can yet prove it 
			didn’t happen (Thank God!), Darwinists are able to proclaim it did. 
			(Keep in mind, when any critic of Darwinist dogma makes a suggestion 
			that similarly can’t be proved, it’s automatically dismissed, 
			because "lack of provability" is a death sentence outside their 
			fraternity. Inside their fraternity, consensus is adequate because 
			the collective agreement of so many "experts" should be accepted as 
			gospel.) 
			 
			To Interventionists like me, the notion of prokaryotes consuming 
			each other to create eukaryotes is every bit as improbable as the 
			divine fiat of Creationists. But even if it were a biological 
			possibility (which most evidence weighs against), it would still 
			seem fair to expect "transition" models somewhere along the line. 
			Darwinists say "no" because this process could have an "overnight" 
			aspect to it. One minute there’s a large prokaryote alongside a 
			small one, the next minute there’s a small eukaryote with what 
			appears to be a nucleus inside it. Not magic, not a miracle, just a 
			biological process unknown today but which could have been possible 
			2.0 billion years ago. Who’s to say, except an "expert"? In any 
			case, large and small prokaryotes lived side by side for 2.0 billion 
			years (long enough, one would think, to learn to do so in harmony), 
			then suddenly a variety of eukaryotes appeared alongside them, whole 
			and complete, ready to join them as the only game in town for 
			another 1.4 billion years (with no apparent changes in the 
			eukaryotes, either). 
			 
			At around 600 million years ago, the first multicellular life-forms 
			(the Ediacaran Fauna) appear--as suddenly and inexplicably as the
			prokaryotes and eukaryotes. To this day, the
			Ediacaran Fauna are not 
			well understood, beyond the fact they were something like jellyfish 
			or seaweeds in a wide range of sizes and shapes. (It remains unclear 
			whether they were plants or animals, or a bizarre combination of 
			both.) They lived alongside the prokaryotes and eukaryotes for about 
			50 million years, to about 550 million years ago, give or take a few 
			million, when the so-called "Cambrian Explosion" occurred. 
			 
			It’s rightly called an "explosion", because within a period of only 
			5 to 10 million years--a mere eye-blink relative to the 3.5 billion 
			years of life preceding it--the Earth’s oceans filled with a 
			dazzling array of seawater plants and all 26 of the animal phyla 
			(body types) catalogued today, with no new phyla added since. No 
			species from the Cambrian era looks like anything currently 
			alive--except trilobites, which seem to have spawned at least 
			horseshoe crabs. However, despite their "alien" appearance, they all 
			arrived fully assembled--males and females, predators and prey, 
			large and small, ready to go. As in each case before, no 
			predecessors can be found. 
			 
			THE PACE HEATS UP 
			Volumes have been written about the Cambrian Explosion and the 
			menagerie of weird plants and animals resulting from it. The Earth 
			was simply inundated with them, as if they’d rained down from the 
			sky. Darwinists concede it is the greatest difficulty--among 
			many--they confront when trying to sell the evolutionary concept of 
			gradualism. There is simply no way to reconcile the breathtaking 
			suddenness, the astounding variety, the overwhelming incongruity of 
			the Cambrian Explosion. It is a testament to the old adage that "one 
			ugly fact can ruin the most beautiful theory". But it’s far from the 
			only one. 
			 
			All of complex life as we understand it begins with the Cambrian 
			Explosion, in roughly the last 550 million years. During that time, 
			the Earth has endured five major and several minor catastrophic 
			extinction events. Now, one can quibble with how an event 
			catastrophic enough to cause widespread extinctions could be called 
			"minor", but when compared to the major ones the distinction is apt. 
			The five major extinction events eliminated 50% to 90% of all 
			species of plants and animals alive when the event occurred. 
			 
			We all know about the last of those, the Cretaceous event of 65 
			million years ago that took out the dinosaurs and much of what else 
			was alive at the time. But what few of us understand is the 
			distinctive pattern to how life exists between extinction events and 
			after extinction events. This difference in the pattern of life 
			creates serious doubts about "gradualism" as a possible explanatory 
			mechanism for how species proliferate. 
			 
			Between extinction events, when environments are stable, life 
			doesn’t seem to change at all. The operative term is stasis. 
			Everything stays pretty much the same. But after extinction events, 
			the opposite occurs: everything changes profoundly. New life-forms 
			appear all over the place, filling every available niche in the new 
			environments created by the after-effects of the catastrophe. 
			Whatever that is, it’s not gradualism. 
			 
			In 1972, (the late) Stephen J. Gould of Harvard and Niles Eldredge 
			of the American Museum of Natural History went ahead and bit the 
			bullet by announcing that fact to the world. Gradual evolution 
			simply was not borne out by the fossil record, and that fact had to 
			be dealt with. Darwin’s view of change had to be modified. It wasn’t 
			a gradual, haphazard process dictated by random, favorable 
			mutations in genes. It was something else. 
			 
			That "something else" they called punctuated equilibrium. The key to 
			it was their open admission of the great secret that life-forms only 
			changed in spurts after extinction events, and therefore had nothing 
			to do with natural selection or survival of the fittest or any of 
			the old Darwinist homilies that everyone had been brainwashed to 
			believe. It was the first great challenge to Darwinian orthodoxy, 
			and it was met with furious opposition. The old guard tagged it 
			"punk eek" and called it "evolution by jerks". 
			 
			TRUTH AND CONSEQUENCES 
			What Gould and Eldredge were admitting was the great truth that 
			evolution by natural selection is not apparent in either the fossil 
			record or in the life we see around us. The old guard insisted that 
			the fossil record simply had to be wrong, that it wasn’t giving a 
			complete picture because large tracts of it were missing. That was 
			true, but much larger tracts were available, and those tracts showed 
			the overwhelming stasis of life-forms in every era, followed by 
			rapid filling of environmental niches after each extinction event. 
			So while parts of the record were indeed missing, what was available 
			was unmistakable. 
			 
			Arguments raged back and forth. Explanations were created to try to 
			counter every aspect of the punk-eek position. None was ever 
			particularly convincing, but they began to build up. Remember, 
			scientists have the great advantage of being considered by one and 
			all as "experts", even when they haven’t the slightest idea of what 
			they’re talking about. That allows them to throw shot after shot 
			against the wall until something sticks, or until the target of 
			their wrath is covered in so much "mud" that it can’t be seen any 
			more. Such was the fate of the punk-eekers. By the early 1990s, 
			they’d been marginalized. 
			 
			One can hardly blame the old-guard Darwinists for those attacks. If 
			granted any credence, the sudden radiations of myriad new species 
			into empty environmental niches could have gutted many of the most 
			fundamental tenets of gradual, "natural" evolution. That idea simply 
			could not become established as a fact. Why? Because the warm pond 
			was drained dry, biochemistry was rendering the 
			"small-eaten-by-large prokaryotes turned into eukaryotes" story 
			absurd, and the Cambrian Explosion was flatly inexplicable. If 
			"sudden radiation" were heaped onto all of that, the entire theory 
			of evolution could flounder, and where would that leave Darwinists? 
			Facing righteous Creationists shouting, "See! God did do it after 
			all!" Whatever else the Darwinists did, they couldn’t allow that to 
			happen. 
			 
			Speaking as an Interventionist, I don’t blame them. To me, God 
			stands on equal footing with the lightning bolt. I see a better, far 
			more rational answer to the mysteries of how life came to be on 
			planet Earth: it was put here by intelligent beings, and it has been 
			continuously monitored by those same beings. Whether it’s been 
			developed for a purpose or toward a goal of some kind seems beyond 
			knowing at present, but it can be established with facts and with 
			data that intervention by outside intelligence presents the most 
			logical and most believable answer to the question of how life came 
			to be here, as well as of how and why it has developed in so many 
			unusual ways in the past 550 million years. 
			 
			So now we come to the crux. 
			 
			COSMIC ARKS 
			Darwinists go through life waving their PhD credentials like 
			teacher’s pets with a hall pass, because it allows them to shout 
			down and ridicule off the public stage anyone who chooses to avoid 
			the years of brainwashing they had to endure to obtain those passes. 
			However, their credentials give them "influence" and "credibility" 
			with the mainstream media, who don’t have the time, the ability or 
			the resources to make certain that everything every Darwinist says 
			is true. They must trust all scientists not to have political or 
			moral agendas, and not to distort the truth to suit those agendas. 
			So, over time, the media have become lapdogs to the teacher’s pets, 
			recording and reporting whatever they’re told to report, while 
			dismissing out of hand whatever they’re told to dismiss out of hand. 
			 
			Despite Darwinists’ rants that those who challenge them do so out of 
			blithering idiocy, that is not always the case. For that matter, 
			their opponents are not all Creationists, or even 
			Intelligent 
			Designers, whom Darwinists labor feverishly to paint into the 
			"goofy" corner where Creationists rightly reside. So 
			Interventionists like me have few outlets for our ideas, and 
			virtually none in the mainstream media. Nevertheless, we feel our 
			view of the origin of life makes the best sense, given the facts as 
			they are now known, and the most basic aspect of our view starts 
			with what I once called "cosmic dump trucks". However, that term has 
			been justly criticized as facetious, so now I call them "cosmic 
			arks". 
			 
			Imagine this scenario: a fleet of intergalactic "terraformers" 
			(another term I favor) cruises the universe. Their job is to locate 
			forming solar systems and seed everything in them with an array of 
			basic, durable life-forms capable of living in any environment, no 
			matter how scabrous. Then the terraformers return on a regular 
			basis, doing whatever is needed to maximize the capacity for life 
			within the developing solar system. Each system is unique, calling 
			for specialized forms of life at different times during its 
			development, which the terraformers provide from a wide array of 
			cosmic arks at their disposal. 
			 
			With that as a given, let’s consider what’s happened on Earth. Soon 
			after it began to coalesce out of dust and gas, two forms of 
			virtually indestructible bacteria appeared on it, as if someone knew 
			precisely what to deliver and when. 
			 
			Also, it would make sense that every other proto-planet in the solar 
			system would be seeded at the same time. How could even terraformers 
			know which forming planets would, after billions of years, become 
			habitable for complex life? And guess what? A meteorite from Mars 
			seems to contain fossilized evidence of the same kinds of nano- 
			(extremely small) bacteria found on Earth today. All other planets, 
			if they’re ever examined, will probably reveal similar evidence of a 
			primordial seeding. It would make no sense for terraformers to do 
			otherwise. 
			 
			THE RUST ALSO RISES 
			So, okay, our solar system is noticed by intergalactic terraformers 
			as the new sun ignites and planets start forming around it. On each 
			of the planets they sprinkle a variety of two separate forms of 
			single-celled bacteria they know will thrive in any environment (the 
			extremophiles). But the bacteria have a purpose: to produce oxygen 
			as a component of their metabolism. Why? Because life almost 
			certainly has the same basic components and functions everywhere in 
			the universe. DNA will be its basis, and "higher" organisms will 
			require oxygen to fuel their metabolism. Therefore, complex life 
			can’t be "inserted" anywhere until a certain level of oxygen exists 
			in a planet’s atmosphere. 
			 
			Wherever this process is undertaken, the terraformers have a major 
			problem to deal with: iron. Iron is an abundant element in the 
			universe. It is certainly abundant in planets (meteorites are often 
			loaded with it). Iron is very reactive with oxygen: that’s what rust 
			is all about. So on none of the new planets forming in any solar 
			system can higher life-forms develop until enough oxygen has been 
			pumped into its atmosphere to oxidize most of its free iron. This, 
			not surprisingly, is exactly what the prokaryotes did during their 
			first 2.0 billion years on Earth. But it had to be a two-part 
			process. 
			 
			The proto-Earth would be cooling the whole time, so let’s say full 
			cooling takes roughly 1.0 billion years. So the extremophiles would 
			be the first batch of prokaryotes inserted because they could 
			survive it. Then, after a billion years or so, the terraformers 
			return and drop off the rest of the prokaryotes, the ones that can 
			live in milder conditions. Also, they have to keep returning on a 
			regular basis because each planet would cool at a different rate due 
			to their different sizes and different physical compositions. 
			 
			However many "check-up" trips are required, by 2.0 billion years 
			after their first seeding of the new solar system the terraformers 
			realize the third planet from the sun is the only one thriving. They 
			are not surprised, having learned that a "zone of life" exists 
			around all suns, regardless of size or type. Now that this sun has 
			taken its optimum shape, they could have predicted which planet or 
			planets would thrive. In this system, the third is doing well but 
			the fourth one is struggling. It has its prokaryotes and it has 
			water, but its abundance of iron (the "red" planet) will require 
			longer to neutralize than such a small planet with a non-reactive 
			core will require to cool off, so it will lose its atmosphere to 
			dissipation into space before a balance can be achieved. The fourth 
			planet will become a wasteland. 
			 
			The terraformers carry out the next phase of planet-building on the 
			thriving third by depositing larger, more complex, more biologically 
			reactive eukaryotes to accelerate the oxidation process. Eukaryotes 
			are far more fragile than prokaryotes, so they can’t be put onto a 
			forming planet until it is sufficiently cooled to have abundant land 
			and water. But once in place and established, their large size 
			(relative to prokaryotes) can metabolize much more oxygen per unit. 
			Together, the fully proliferated prokaryotes and eukaryotes can spew 
			out enough oxygen to oxidize every bit of free iron on the Earth’s 
			crust and in its seas, and before long be lacing the atmosphere with 
			it. 
			 
			Sure enough, when the terraformers return in another 1.4 billion 
			years they find Earth doing well, but the situation on Mars is 
			unimproved: rust as far as the eye can see. (Mars is likely to have 
			at least prokaryotic life, because there wouldn’t have been enough 
			oxygen in the surface water it once had--or in the permafrost it 
			still has--to turn its entire surface into iron oxide.) Earth, 
			however, is doing fine. Most of its free iron is locked up as rust, 
			and oxygen levels in the atmosphere are measurably increasing. It’s 
			still too soon to think about depositing highly complex life, but 
			that day is not far off now, measurable in tens of millions of years 
			rather than in hundreds of millions. For the moment, Earth is ready 
			for its first load of multicellular life, and so it is deposited: 
			the Ediacaran Fauna. 
			
			 
			Though scientists today have no clear understanding of what the 
			Ediacarans were or what their purpose may have been (because they 
			don’t exist today), it seems safe to assume they were even more 
			prolific creators of oxygen than the eukaryotes. 
			 
			If, indeed, terraformers are behind the development of life on 
			Earth, nothing else makes sense. If, on the other hand, everything 
			that happened here did so by nothing but blind chance and 
			coincidence, it was the most amazing string of luck imaginable. 
			Everything happened exactly when it needed to happen, exactly where 
			it needed to happen, exactly how it needed to happen. 
			 
			If that’s not an outright miracle, I don’t know what is. 
			 
			MAKING BETTER SENSE 
			Assuming terraformers were/are responsible for seeding and 
			developing life on Earth, we can further assume that by 550 million 
			years ago at least the early oceans were sufficiently oxygenated to 
			support genuinely complex life. That was delivered en masse during 
			the otherwise inexplicable Cambrian Explosion, after which followed 
			the whole panoply of "higher" forms of life on Earth as we have come 
			to know it. (The whys and wherefores of that process are, 
			regrettably, beyond the scope of this essay, but there are answers 
			that have as much apparent sense behind them as what has been 
			outlined.) 
			 
			During those 550 million years, five major and several minor 
			extinction events occurred, after each of which a few million years 
			would pass while the Earth stabilized with environments modified in 
			some way by the catastrophes. Some pre-event life-forms would 
			persist into the new environments, to be joined by new ark-loads 
			delivered by the terraformers, who would analyze the situation on 
			the healing planet and deliver species they knew would survive in 
			the new environments and establish a balance with the life-forms 
			already there (the Interventionist version of punctuated 
			equilibrium). 
			 
			We’ve already seen the difficulties Darwinists have with trying to 
			explain the flow of life on Earth presented in the fossil record. 
			That record can be explained by the currently accepted Darwinian 
			paradigm, but the veneer of "scholarship" overlaying it is little 
			different from the divine fiat of Creationists. And it can be 
			explained by Intelligent Designers, who claim anything so 
			bewilderingly complex couldn’t possibly have been arrayed without 
			the guidance of some superior, unifying intelligence (which they 
			stop short of calling "God", because otherwise they are merely 
			Creationists without cant). 
			 
			Considering all of the above, we Interventionists believe the 
			terraformer scenario explains the fossil record of life on Earth 
			with more creativity, more accuracy and more logic than the others, 
			and in the fullness of time will have a far greater probability of 
			being proved correct. We don’t bother trying to establish or even 
			discuss who the terraformers are, or how they came to be, because 
			both are irrelevant and unknowable until they choose to explain it 
			to us. Besides, speculating about their origin detracts from the far 
			more germane issue of trying to establish that our explanation of 
			life’s origin makes better sense than any other. 
			 
			We will continue to be ignored by mainstream media simply because 
			the idea of intelligent life existing outside Earth is so 
			frightening to the majority of those bound to it. Among many reasons 
			for fear, the primary one might be our unfortunate habit of 
			filtering everything beyond our immediate reality through our own 
			perceptions. Thus, we attribute to others the same traits and 
			characteristics we possess. Another bad habit appears when we 
			discover new technology. Invariably our first thought is: "How can 
			we use this to kill more of our enemies?" Collectively, we all have 
			enemies we want to eliminate to be done with the problem they 
			present. Like it or not, this is a dominant aspect of human nature. 
			 
			Because we so consistently project onto others the darkest facets of 
			our nature, we automatically assume--despite ET and Alf and other 
			lovable depictions in our culture--that real aliens will want to 
			harm us. Consequently, we avoid facing the possibility of their 
			existence in every way we can. (Here I can mention the obstinate 
			resistance I have personally found to serious consideration of the 
			Starchild
			skull, which by all rights should have been eagerly and 
			thoroughly examined three years ago.) 
			 
			So Interventionism is ignored because it scrapes too close to 
			UFOs, 
			
			crop circles, alien abductions and every other subject that 
			indicates we humans may, in the end, be infinitesimally 
			insignificant in the grand scheme of life in the universe. There is 
			much more to say about it, of course, especially as it relates to 
			human origins, but that has to wait until the second installment of 
			this essay. 
			 
			For now, let the last word be that the last word on origins--of life 
			and of humans--is a long, long way from being written.
			But when it is, I strongly suspect it will be Intervention. 
			
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