(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) Today, we're going to be looking at Matt Powell again because he said something really stupid. Sure enough, evolution teaches that they hitched a ride on the back of asteroids. Doesn't that sound fun? And they don't get along anyways. Squids and octopuses are constantly fighting each other, so I don't know how they made it here to begin with. What? No, this is not what evolutionary theory says. The survey said... The octopus certainly does look strange, with bugged out eyes, suction cup tentacles, and the ability to change color for camouflage. But a new paper in a peer-reviewed scientific journal posits that octopi aren't just strange, they're aliens. Literally. That's according to 33 authors writing in the journal Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. In this first clip, Matt Powell is going to lie to you about cephalopod evolution. Squids and octopuses have a different genetic build than any other creature in the world. So they couldn't, scientists have come to the conclusion that they couldn't have come from any other sea creature. This is a lie. The survey said... FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU But the authors argue that the octopus is oddly quite different from their nautiloid ancestors. Their large brain, sophisticated nervous systems, flexible bodies, and camouflage ability seem to have, quote, appeared suddenly on the evolutionary scene. That is, the transformative genes from the Nautilus to the Octopus can't be easily found in any pre-existing life form, the authors say. So where did they come from? In answering that question, the authors take an out-of-this-world leap. They write, quote, "...it is plausible, then, to suggest octopi seem to be borrowed from a far distant future in terms of terrestrial evolution, or, more realistically, from the cosmos at large." Matt Powell is lying to you. Now, Matt Powell is going to lie to you about where evolutionary theory says that cephalopods come from. So here's what evolutionary theory states about how they got here. Evolution says, or evolutionists claim, it says one plausible explanation. And our view is that the genes are likely new extraterrestrial imports to Earth. These scientists declare that, quote, the squid eggs hitched a ride to Earth on the back of asteroids. That is what evolution teaches, folks. I am not kidding. I was in an interview with a friend of mine, he's an actual creation scientist. Now, him and I don't see eye to eye on everything, but he brought this up and I thought he was joking with me. I said, are you serious? We cut for a moment. I'm like, you've got to be kidding me. This is what they teach? He said, yeah, it's what they teach. I looked it up. Sure enough, evolution teaches that they hitched a ride on the back of asteroids. Doesn't that sound fun? No serious scientist is saying this. The survey said. It's very important when you read these journal articles to also listen to dissenting opinions about the journal articles. They most likely will point out flaws in that particular article. A lot of times that will cause the original authors to rework their paper and resubmit it. Typically, this is shown on the journal articles page online. What they definitely didn't find is a completely different genetic build than any other creature in the world. We know that the cephalopods are part of the mollusca clade, which means that they are genetically and physiologically linked to other species within this clade. And that clade is itself a derivation of a previous clade, because that's how evolution works. The survey said. Scientists simply are not saying what he says they are saying. The survey said. Next, Matt Powell is going to lie to you about how monkeys traveled from Africa to South America. Evolutionists also claim that monkeys, because monkeys had to have somehow gotten to South America from Africa. That's what evolutionary theory states, and they have a problem figuring out how. So their best conclusion, that their best scientists have come up with, is this idea that monkeys surfed across the ocean, across the ocean to a land anew over in South America. Now that has a lot of problems. There's tides out there, you know, they probably get blown off their surf. Who has ever seen a monkey surf? I don't even think they can. Everybody says that monkeys surf from Africa to South America. The survey said. He's just wanting to make it look ridiculous when it isn't. Here's another one for you. Can't resist a headline that from the mail. Monkeys who sailed 900 miles across the Atlantic. Intrepid monkeys, again, according to scientists, made an improbable sea voyage from Africa to South America on a raft. Picture it, on a raft 34 million years ago. They're saying the only way they could have got there is climbing on a little raft. So, Matt, maybe you should try to understand the science you're trying to belittle before you start acting like a fool. So you can either believe one or two things here tonight in closing. You can either believe that in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth and the earth was without form and void, or you can believe that monkeys surfed the ocean blue to find a place in the sky. You can either believe that in the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God. It's powerful, amen. Or you can believe that squids hitched a rye on the back of asteroids to get here to us. You have to make that choice, folks, and a wise person, an honest person will come to the light. He that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest that they're The octopus certainly does look strange, with bugged out eyes, suction cup tentacles, and the ability to change color for camouflage. But a new paper in a peer-reviewed scientific journal posits that octopi aren't just strange, they're aliens, literally.