![Image](https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/564x/fe/28/e7/fe28e74509cc22451156f4b6c6380c7a.jpg)
Ken Hamm's re-creation of Noah's ark built with a half dozen diesel-powered hydraulically-operated cranes and cement mixers for the rebar reinforced concrete hull. Needless to say, the ship doesn't float and neither does the validity of the story. That doesn't bother Hamm, though. When confronted about his inability to build the ark exactly as described in the bible, Hamm responds in presuppositional fashion: "Were you there?"
Gee, did we need to be when we have the bible right in front us telling us how this thing was built? And even if we accepted that crazy story as historical, this is yet more proof that Hamm is not following the bible since Noah's boat supposedly floated and Hamm's doesn't. Gotta be doing something wrong, son, and I didn't need to be there to know that. Just like I didn't need to be there to know Noah wasn't using diesel-powered cranes or mixing concrete.
Now what more proof do you need that the bible stores are physically and historically impossible than when you can't build an ark even when given explicit instructions? God's word? Don't bet on it.