Apostate Kate:
My depth of research may not be as deep as a research scientist, and I don't remember details as well as others, does not mean that I am incapable of learning and coming to a conclusion. I came to my conclusions and it has nothing to do with the WT.
Perhaps. It also has nothing to do with the facts. Your conclusions seem remarkably similar to those who like the WT, for ideological reasons refuse to believe in evolution.
Many of you conclude it must be fact since it looks like it probably is.
No, many of us conclude it is almost certainly a fact because there is overwhelming evidence in favour of it.
I am not convinced. I do not see a natural world where oganisms are in constant fluctuation between species.
Why would you? Such a world is not predicted by any evolutionary model I know of.
I see a world full of individual plants and animals that when an error in their genetic code happens, most often you see a negative problem.
Which is predicted by the standard evolutionary model.
Common sense says that there would be transitional spcies everywhere!
What would count as a transitional species? If there was an animal with some mammalian and some reptilian features, would that count? What about an animal that can almost fly? Or a ring species? What exactly do you think you should expect to see?
The mighty colecanth once throught extinct and mutated into a trout by now was found alive and well.
It was thought extinct because the only fossils of it were very old. This belief was revised as new evidence became available. Something very like it is almost certainly ancestral to many modern fish.
Leolai the one link you posted was not in a language that I could understand without weeks of research into what each word means.
I think that's the heart of the problem. I knew you didn't really understand this stuff but I had no idea the extent of your ignorance. There are no words in that article that you wouldn't find in "Evolution for Dummies" or something similar. If you don't understand the terms used there, then you can't hope to grasp the underlying argument - which is exactly what we find.
Do you really think that a genetic scientist has not hoped to find evidence of evolution into another species in all these years of fruit fly research?
I'm quite sure a lot of them preferred not to find such a thing, as it makes interbreeding experiments very difficult. Nevertheless, new species have been observed as a result of these experiments. See http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-speciation.html and scroll down to section 5.3. Actually, don't bother. If you didn't understand the simplified Wiki article, you'll really struggle there.
Unless you're willing to do the research - which in this case should only involve some light to moderate reading with a dictionary to hand - you'll have to accept that those who have done the research, the experts in the field, the people who have studied this subject for decades, the people who perform the experiments and have observed things you claim have never been observed - that those people know more about it than you do and as such are exponentially more likely to be right.