To be nit-picky, he actually did not. It is Grass
é with an accent aigu.
Nitpick; nitpick...
The problem is that, despite his vehement claims he is the one not knowing much of evolution or genetic (amusing consider he is making the exact opposite accusation, projection, maybe).
For example, his whole point is based that evolution will produce organisms that will gain in complexity. This is illustrated by his fundamental misreading of the sentence: "gradual accumulation of small genetic changes" that he microevolution: "Microevolution decreases genetic variability not increases it."
Presumably, Randman is here thinking about Natural selection, not microevolution. Microevolution would be a combination of genetic mutations -that increase genetic variability, sometime, -it's going to confuse him- by decreasing the number of genes and natural selection, that does reduce genetic variability so that the neat effect can be an increase or a decrease in genetic variability).
Obviously, if he confuse microevolution and natural selection, our argument that microevolution and macroevolution is the same thing will appear illogical to him. Makes sense.
He also misunderstand the definition of macroevolution, which is, let me restate, evolution above the species level. Statements like: "The fossil record just does not show evolutionary transitions of macroevolution." illustrate a misunderstanding of this process. Clearly, he means some big change (outside of the kind). But that's not macroevolution as scientists define it.
Of course, this sentence is also wrong, because transitional fossils, between "kind", are actually well known and described (for example, between
fish and tetrapods or
reptiles and birds). Obviously, I am sure Randman will shift the goalposts and pretend these were incorrectly identified, the common creationist defence in such case.
In term of genetic, he clearly does not know much better.
For example, he misunderstand the point of comparing corals and human genomes (using the well characterized genome as an animal model for vertebrates).
He also does not seem to understand the concept of genetic homology, despite it being pointed out to him.
And that's his main problem at the end.
He does not know much, understand even less, but consider the various attempts at correcting him by people that actually know what they are talking about (Hello Bonokon) as an attempt to obfuscate the point.
He seems to have received his deficient understanding from creationists websites.
That, in itself, is not as much as a deal breaker as his stubborn refusal to listen and learn.
Clearly, there is no going through him at this stage and the whole discussion is doomed to be nothing but an infuriating waste of time...