No, it isn't.
Evolution predicts that genomes will change over time. Those changes may result in more, less, or the same amount of complexity in daughter organisms.
The summed complexity of all the variations in all the genomes may also increase, decrease, or stay the same.
From the beginning, it predicts greater complexity. It's silly to deny it. I am not arguing that evolution can proceed with decreases in genes. In fact, the only kind of evolution that is observed pretty much does exactly that.
What I am saying is that if life evolved, then genes and the genome evolved, at least according to NeoDarwinism. ND rejects the idea God or any intelligent force designed it, right?
So it couldn't start out all the way done, right?
Genetic material would have to evolve in a species that survives via natural selection. The changes would be connected to actual traits and how well they do in the physical environment. It's what evos have taught for decades and should not even be an issue.
If you disagree that the genome did not evolve, how did it get it here then?