<< Rabid fundamentalists... pouncing on a new tidbit... frenzied desperation... champion speciation as a myth >>
      Rabid fundamentalists? I get the idea that you're trying to convey the idea that those who try to support what they perceive as rather animalistic in nature. The whole "frenzied desperation" line has me a bit concerned. I don't see on these boards a sense of "frantic posting," and I'd prefer not to fall under that general category.
      I see nothing in nature to support the idea that there is no God, just like several people see nothing in nature to support the validity of that position. Yeah, and the "deeply-held misconceptions" line came across a bit arrogant too. If we can look at the same data and come to different conclusions, how is either side supported? Why should we accept the a priori assumptions required to come to the same conclusions regarding the same data that you do?
     To me, speciation isn't that big of a deal. Scientists define what makes a species, so naturally they would be able to define transitions between them. And I don't think that anybody's faith is dependent solely on the falsity of macroevolution. Do you know anyone like that, and what do they use to justify that position? Every such "potentially damaged article" in the past, such as the Archaeoraptor hoax, has not withstood the test of time. It's not like we need to "jump" on it. It'll sort itself out naturally. And like you said, if it is confirmed, it's not like that'll hurt my feelings any. A lot of it is still open to interpretation of what we see in nature. Because we must use the present as the key to the past... hint, hint -- 1984 -- our interpretation is limited to inferences we derive from what we can observe. I'm not going to argue that you're obviously a misinformed beast who rabidly seeks at every opportunity to champion the dogmatic doctrines of Godless evolution, and I would request at least same respect. I apologize for whatever previous run-ins you may have had with these "rabid fundamentalists," but I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't apply that as a blanket statement for everyone who takes the same data you have, yet comes to a different conclusion.
     Who defines what macroevolution is, anyway? The church, or the scientific community? So why should our faith rest on whether macroevolution is true or false -- all you'd have to do then, as the scientific community, is redefine macroevolution. We both know it would just turn into a political game at that point, with both sides arguing about how the other is stupid, misinformed, or <--GASP--> not playing by the rules.
     One more thing. How does something "apear"ing in Nature mandate its "validity" and "credibility"? Just a thought. The whole Archaeoraptor thing was published in National Geographic, which had to later publish a retraction to maintain integrity -- which is highly commendable, by the way.
     Yeah, anyway, it's 3:35 in the morning and I have class in a few hours, so I'm going to go practice transcendental meditation or whatever they're calling it these days. Good night, all.