Did creationists PREDICT that all organisms would use the same genetic system? I don't think so. It's a direct implication of common descent.
Did evolution predict this? Do you have a citation for this prediction? What if there were two separate genetic codes? Wouldn’t evolution accommodate this by invoking convergence? The problem with evolution is that it set up to “predict” everything. Would two genetic codes support, or confuse, the notion of a single designer?
Did evolution “predict” life would only be carbon-based?
The fun thing about this is it isn't just cytochrome C. We can make trees that confirm evolution using all kinds of different genes.
I agree that magic is fun!
Like every claim I have ever seen for evolution, ultimately there is an illusion behind it. I believe these “protein sequence trees” are so egregious as a non-starter it’s hard to find them even in the secular peer-reviewed journals. Don’t get me wrong, I believe there is plenty of flawed material published in the secular journals, but at least there is a degree of scrutiny that can serve as a deterrent to some of these super-flimsy illusionary arguments. These claims instead seem to permeate from evolutionist talk-origins-like coffee shops, and from course assignments of college professors who should know better.
On the other hand, it’s easy to find evidence in the secular journals contradicting the faithful coffee shop napkin story tellers:
“Even at smaller evolutionary intervals,
many individual genes show tree topologies in fundamental disagreement with the organismal phylogeny." [emphasis added] Genome Evolution at the Genus Level: Comparison of Three Complete Genomes of Hyperthermophilic Archaea - Genome Res. 2001. 11: 981-993
Here is the illusion:
1) These “trees” only show sporadic nodal relationships, most of which fall within the family taxa and therefore offer nothing to separate “evolution” from created kinds. The trunk and major interconnecting branches are all missing.
2) Of the nodal relationships, the evolutionary distances mislead its representation of nodes with a “recent” common ancestor. For example, note this tree posted by an evolutionist in another forum, where he noted, among other things, the “recent” branch between dogs and seals:
Yet if we use the evolutionists’ own citations from journals, note the distance to scale with human/chimps (CYC was picked by evos because it was a protein that showed little difference between chimps/humans):
You have to actually double the vertical above for it to be to scale.
Finally, I conducted a test at my forum some time ago as a way to demonstrate the illusion behind Cytochrome C by providing an expanded CYC sequence chart, but without the names of the animals. A well-informed evolutionist under the moniker “numbers” accepted the challenge. The results:
29% fit the evolution paradigm. Of this group, 80% fit within the family taxa and easily could be a creation kind, so this number is really 5.8% (easily explained by “noise” - a blind squirrel… well, you know the story).
24% neither confirmed or denied the evolution paradigm.
47% did not support the evolution paradigm.
Protein sequence homology such as CYC is nothing but an illusion that offers virtually nothing to the creation vs evolution debate. I say "virtually" because if anything such sequences hurt the evolutionist position since its yet another "prediction" pretender.
This bears repeating: “Even at smaller evolutionary intervals,
many individual genes show tree topologies in fundamental disagreement with the organismal phylogeny." [emphasis added] Genome Evolution at the Genus Level: Comparison of Three Complete Genomes of Hyperthermophilic Archaea - Genome Res. 2001. 11: 981-993
Fred