Theland//So you are making an assumption that genetic mutations are beneficial when in fact the opposite is true.//
Not at all. You are assuming that all mutations are not beneficial. All I said is that one non-harmful mutation would need to occur in each several tens of thousands of matings.
The damaging or fatal mutations don't matter. The genomic line of individuals carry them died out long ago.
We have been down this track before. Oh no that's right, I went down this track. You slinked away and waited before you started a new thread on the same old theme. Maybe this time you will answer but I doubt it.
https://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Society-and-Culture/Religion-and-Spirituality/Question1683017-7.html#answer-12206428
Theland //Mutations generally are deficient and a loss of information to the DNA causing I llness and disability.//
Yes, in general they are not a good thing though they don't necessarily cause a loss of information but a change of information. Sometimes they make no difference and sometimes they confer an advantage.
It is clear that genes sometimes make multiple copies of themselves. If this does not cause a problem the extra copies provide an opportunity for some to mutate into genes that lead to new and novel features without losing the original feature.
//Viruses and bacteria add nothing to our DNA, and I. Fact are attacked by antibodies. //
Our immune system doesn't always win. Retroviruses reproduce by splicing their genes into cells' DNA, taking over the molecular machinery and causing the cell to make viruses. If the host survives and the virus infects a germ cell, the genes can become a permanent part of the germ line and become available to the host genome where they occasionally mutate into useful features.
Approximately eight percent of our genome was inherited from viruses. Some of these genes are vital in the reproductive processes of animals.
//They do nothing to improve DNA which continues faithfully to reproduce copie of itself.//
Genes do not faithfully copy themselves. Have you ever wondered why the meiosis process is not perfect? It is because there is an optimum susceptibility to mutation. If the process were perfect there could be no change and no evolution. It is worth the risk of huge numbers fatal flaws because occasionally something good comes of it.
It doesn't matter that most of the mutations are failures that disadvantage the individual because evolution happens on populations and new features are an advantage to the population.
08:40 Sat 23rd Nov 2019