Well,
@andym, you are entitled to believe anything you like, and in this free country you can release any amount of pollution you like as allowed by law. Especially if it would be inconvenient for you to do otherwise.
But I just want to say that I find the phrase 'evolution scientists' hysterical, I'm going to be chuckling about that for awhile.
Scientists started out thinking the world was a few thousand years old, and then figured from literally HUNDREDS of different lines of evidence (not just carbon-14 and evolution) that it had to be far older. And in fact, those HUNDREDS of different lines of evidence all are consistent with one another, in line with an old earth. I agree that some of the lines of evidence (like carbon-14) can be off by some percentage, which gets larger as the sample gets older (bc all the carbon-14 has decayed, there's none left to measure). Which is when they switch to a different, longer lived isotope, of which there are dozens, and which all 'ladder' together back literally billions of years.
Which, of course, matches perfectly with what when we look out into space at distant galaxies. Which we can measure by a variety of independent methods to be billions of light years away. So now we need to suppose that the vast universe was somehow created a few thousand years ago with all that light we are collecting in telescopes in flight 99.9999% of the way to earth. Or that the speed of light somehow changed by a million fold, without any change in chemistry, nor any detectable change to the 6-th decimal over the last century.
The analogy is that a detective is sent one morning to the scene of a grisly murder. After looking around, he concludes that the time of death (and thus the murder) was 12 ± 3 hours earlier, the previous evening. For example, the blood spatters are dry and have turned color (consistent with lab tests on blood), the body is room temperature. Rigor mortis has set in (which takes several hours). But being a diligent detective, many other lines of evidence are collected. The pool of blood has soaked into the carpeting to some distance. The victim is dressed in the clothes he was seen in the previous day. There is a nightcap poured, but not drunk, and the coffee machine is clean and cold. The dinner dishes are still in the sink. Lights are still switched on throughout the house, as if he died when the sun was down. The victim's cat has eaten all of its food and water, and is acting hungry. And so on and so forth.
And then somebody walks in, and says the murder occurred literally just a tiny fraction of a second before the detective arrived (in other words, one millionth as long as 12 hours)! And argues that every single bit of evidence has an alternative explanation. Some, like the cat or the dishes, sure. Maybe he woke up and put the same clothes on. Maybe he likes to have a drink with breakfast. But others, like the body temp, the dried blood, and rigor mortis? How can you explain THOSE things?
And then the guy starts saying that HE'S a detective too (and flashes some odd credential), but he's not a 'body-temperature' detective, that has been discredited and can have errors ±50%. And asks the first detective if he was at the scene the night before, and so how can he really be 'sure' and asks how much does he gets paid to do his job? And then the new guy points out that he is a volunteer supported by donations of like-minded people, and thus completely 'independent'.
And so you see, it's really the word of one detective against another. They can't both be right!