Honey Bees, Pollination, and no Evolution

Large numbers of honey bees are dying off, and it is not just a case of, "Bugs die, so what?" Mount up, ride to the top of the hill, and get the big picture. Living things have their ecological niches, and honey bees are important to many other organisms — including humans.

They are the most important pollinators to the survival of many kinds of plants, and they produce honey and beeswax that are important for humans. Flowers attract the bees in a mutually-beneficial relationship. This presents one of several problems for evolutionists.

Honey bees are dying off, evolutionists are no help. They cannot get around problems of plants, pollen, evidence for bee evolution, and more.
Honey Bees in honeycomb, Pixabay / PollyDot
Bees need pollen to survive, plants produce pollen and need honey bees for its distribution. But according to the evolution story, they did not exist at the same time. Darwinists say wasps existed at that time and honey bees came later. However, there is no compelling evidence to support that concept.

Indeed, the evolution of insects which suddenly appeared in the fossil record is also problematic. The truth is that evolutionary thinking is not helping to solve the problem of bees dying off, so those owlhoots can buzz off until they learn that bees and flowers were created, not evolved.
The headline was stark: “U.S. beekeepers had a disastrous winter. Between June 2024 and January, a full 62% of commercial honey bee colonies in the United States died, according to an extensive survey. It was the largest die-off on record, coming on the heels of a 55% die-off the previous winter. USDA research points to viruses spread by pesticide-resistant mites, indicating a worrying trend.” According to the article, “nearly all the dead colonies tested positive for bee viruses spread by parasitic mites. Alarmingly, every single one of the mites the researchers screened was resistant to amitraz, the only viable mite-specific pesticide—or miticide—of its kind left in humans’ arsenal.”

The rest of the article is found at "Honey Bee Crisis Not Helped by Evolutionists." Also of interest: "Ever-Active Honeybees."