This is utterly false. First you admit that you have not studied it in detail, then you go on to make highly unorthodox claims about what the theory is, those two statements do not add up do they?
Wrong. I did not make unorthodox statements about what the theory claims - I merely analyzed whether it falls into proper natural science or not. This doesn't take much knowledge to analyze, mostly just an understanding of what natural science is and is not.
You mistake the ToE for the phylogenetic trees constructed based on the evidence of the theory and the process the theory presents. I agree that there are different interpretations of the data when it comes to constructing the exact historical process, but that is not the core of the theory.
What the theory of evolution claims is that there is a change in inherited traits in a population through successive generations. The changes are "selected" based on how well they fit the environment the organisms live in. That is the claim, not some specific phylogenetic tree of life.
The trees are part of the theory - you can't claim that that life evolves and then not show demonstrate it. Those trees are the theory in its multiple forms. I will grant you, of course, that no one tree is seen as ultimately authoritative and that they are subject to change - but the trees nevertheless go hand in hand with the theory; they are the visual representation of the various thoughts on evolutionary theory.
And the theory is fundamentally historical. It's all about how life, historically, came to be and they provide various mechanism to try to explain how things evolved over history (hence Darwin's book was titled "The Origin of Species"). Again, I'll grant you that it isn't meant to be "exact" since obviously there is no way for them to acquire the necessary data to form an exact. Of course, as I pointed out before, we have no clue how representative the fossils we have are of the whole - so we can't even figure out an estimate of how accurate the various models truly are.
Things like "natural selection" and "evolution" are merely corner stones to the theory, but are not in themselves the theory.
These claims can be tested as well and they have been ad nauseum. Examples that I have listed a thousand times before comes to mind. The long term evolution experiment using E.coli bacteria (lead by Richard Lenski:
http://myxo.css.msu.edu/ecoli/) who has passed 50 000 generations.
Lizards who got placed in a different environment showed morphological change after only 37 years (
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/04/080417112433.htm).
Molecular biology demonstrates the shared inheritance of living species through DNA comparison as in ERVs and shared accumulated pseudogene mutations.
Testing whether things change somewhat overtime (simply evolution) is not the same as testing the Theory of Evolution which is historical in nature. Evolution is a natural process that can be observed and tested in the present, the Theory of Evolution cannot be observed or tested in the present as it is a historical theory which tries to uncover how all the various forms of life came to be.
So it has been DEMONSTRATED that the process of evolution (known as genetic mutation and natural selection) is actual, and it has been demonstrated that species have a shared ancestry. That is the core of the theory and it is as solid as science gets.
Evolution and the Theory of Evolution are two different things. Establishing one does not establish the other. Non sequitor.
Then we can quibble about the exact details of the HISTORICAL process which is an inference from the core of the theory, that depends on our understanding of the data and on what data is available to us. But to go from that to question the process itself and the fact that all living species share ancestry is a non-sequitur.
The above has not been established. It is a historical theory but not something that can be objectively demonstrated. Not to say that there isn't supporting evidence for it, but it cannot be demonstrated as it is a historical claim. Also, to introduce the above is to introduce the issue of abiogenesis - which most advocates of the evolutionary theory try to keep as a seperate issue.
And we have provided multiple ways of falsifying the ToE in this thread already.
The ToE is unfalsifiable and you haven't provided any adequate means of falisifying it. Granted there are important peripheral issues which the ToE relies on such as evolution happening - but that is not a direct test on the ToE itself.