Hi, nice to have you back. I look forward to the promotion of your thread on whales.
In the meantime, let me talk to you about torsion. Torsion is something that happens early in the development of gastropods. The following description is from Wikipedia: "Torsion is the rotation of the visceral mass, mantle and shell 180˚ with respect to the head and foot of the gastropod. This brings the mantle cavity and anus to an anterior position above the head."
Now, this already raises the question of why, if gastropods are meant to be like that, this result is achieved by doing origami on the basal form of mollusks. But there's more. Some gastropods, for example the Opisthobranchia, do not exhibit torsion in their mature form. Now, given that nature always seems to conspire to delight evolutionists, can you guess what happens to them?
That's right. They undergo torsion followed by detorsion, leaving them back in the basal form.
You might care to ponder why torsion followed by detorsion should be the best way of producing gastropods without torsion, rather than just letting them alone; and why God did not opt to make this his method for producing tigers or jellyfish or lobsters without torsion. And why,
again, the phenomena fit perfectly with evolutionary thinking, just like all God's other brilliant ideas.