Ah, rachamim, but you've proved my point exactly!
1) First, it's not even clear whether you are a creationist in the sense I'm referring to. Note that the creationism I'm speaking of (as you would know if you'd read the earlier posts!) has absolutely nothing to do with whether you believe your god or gods created or "are responsible" for the universe. It has to do with whether you accept the empirical facts about the age of the Earth & universe, the relatedness of life on Earth (including human life) to each other, and its gradual evolution from life from a common ancestor. Creationists, as I (and many others) use the term in this context, are people who don't.
2) Indeed, you appear to be a literalist/fundamentalist Jew from what I can see, given your remarks on scripture and adherence to some of the wackier points of law. So it's hardly surprising to find you'd be a creationist (if indeed you are!) This is what we nearly always find with creationists --
they fundamentally believe in creationism because their preferred interpretation of their religious teachings require it. You always see the creationist arguments about the scientific evidence come later, when cognitive dissonance forces them to believe that the evidence
mustn't show anything that disagrees with their pre-existing religious beliefs.
3) Finally, as you noticed

, I made many generalizations about the typical ignorance of creationists. While one example proves nothing, I'll just note that you're helping my case here:
As for the irrefutable aspects of Evolution, there IS a very good reason why it is called the "THEORY of Evolution."
Now, the word 'theory' has a different meaning/connotation in science than it does in colloquial speech. Colloquially, a "theory" is something unproven, uncertain, up-in-the-air, less than a fact; something can be "just a theory." But in science, "theory" just means something like:
a framework for making sense of a body of observations. Theories can be known with certainty to be true, or not-certain-but-probably-right, or up in the air, or just a guess, or known to completely wrong. The word just means they're a framework for understanding. That's why we have the
theory of gravity, or the
germ theory of disease, or the
atomic theory of matter. Not because anyone thinks gravity or germs or atoms are "unproven" or "debatable" or "just a guess" -- but because, like evolution, they're conceptual frameworks for explaining a wide variety of observations.
You were clearly ignorant of this fact. Many, many creationists are, and so they often make this argument (and are often corrected just as I corrected you.)
Now there's nothing wrong or shameful with being ignorant of the scientific meaning of "theory". Most non-scientists are. Everyone is ignorant of a lot of things -- I'm completely ignorant when it comes to auto transmissions, or your particular sub-sect of Judaism, for example. But what is wrong is starting from a basis of ignorance in a topic and inventing/repeating random claims about that topic.
I think that about covers it. A few random notes:
I'm not sure why you seem to have a weird issue with generalizations. We're talking about broad categories of people here;
of course we're going to be generalizing -- the question is whether they're accurate generalizations or not. You don't seem to like mine, probably because you feel they reflect poorly on your views (or you didn't really read my post and
think I'm attacking your views, when I'm not). If you think they're wrong, you're free to offer evidence to that effect. So far all I've seen is indignation.
Note that scientists
do agree on an
immense amount of what's known about the history of life on Earth, evolution, etc. After all, it's not like you go to Cambridge and learn one set of facts, then another at Harvard, another at IIT, and so on! That's one of the differences between science and (say) religion. The basics are well-established and agreed-on by
almost everyone. (There are a handful of crackpots everywhere, I'd guess -- definitely in physics.) Of course there are lots of things different researchers disagree on -- those are things on the frontiers of research, that are
not certain! You'll find lots of topics in evolution like that. (For example, did modern humans emerge from Africa ~80,000 years ago, or did they evolve globally from the hominids present worldwide from almost ~1,000,000 years ago?) But you won't find disagreement on things like "did humans evolve" or "is matter made out of atoms" -- those were settled long ago.
If one talks about scientists one might consider Einstein as a sort of watermark. Einstein was a theist.
This is wrong. You can easily verify it by looking at the Wikipedia entry for Einstein or any other decent source. Einstein often threw around the term God, but he always was clear in that he meant a "feeling of transcendence" or "the mystery of the universe" or somesuch. He most emphatically did not believe in a personal god, such as the deities in Christianity, Islam, Judaism, etc. Please, go look up it.
"Look at all the Creationists on BL and THEY are the ones who believe they know enough to challenge Evolutionists!": Yes, because a Harm Reduction site attracts so many Creationism experts.
Oh, this pattern isn't unique to BL; you see it pretty much everywhere creationists pop up. BL is just convenient. I've talked with / debated creationists all over the place, online & off, in various venues, and BL's archives are not atypical. You could just as easily look at standard creationist videos or tracts.
"Most Creationists are intelligent, just not reasobale ot knowledgeable...": No "arrogance" there...

Oh, that's not arrogance. Arrogance would be if I said
I was exceptionally reasonable & knowledgeable -- or at a minimum, if I said that all people who accepted evolution were all exceptionally reasonable & knowledgeable. (They're not, BTW.) This is just a negative judgment of another group.
Anyways, this may bother you, but it is a fact. Folks who are knowledgeable about the issues are
overwhelming those who accept evolution. Take a look at the
1997 Gallup poll of scientists & engineers cited here, for example, or this
Pew survey of scientists in the USA. The former found 95% of all scientists & engineers in the US accepted evolution; the latter that 87% of scientists accepted evolution,
even when the question was framed in a way that seemed to exclude evolution directed by God. (Note that these surveys generally include a lot of people with science degrees who aren't active researchers; a survey of, say, active biologists would come up even more uniformly.) I encourage anyone who doubts this to drop an email to a couple of the professors in the biology department of their local research university -- just politely ask whether evolution really happened or not. See what answer you get...