That is a question I ask myself daily. I try and use process of elimination.
I eliminated Darwin's theory the first day.
Subjects like these you must have an open mind and some common sense with a tad of intelligence. Unfortunate that is rarely found in this forum.
Scientist want you to believe this complex organism evolved from a warm pool of liquid
Then there are complex ecosystems which do not seem to have been accidental.
The Flagellum's Rotary Engine
The engine itself [above] is about 1/100,000th of an inch wide -- far smaller than can be seen by the human eye.
Flagellum are tiny bacteria -- one cell -- that have a tail and use it to move through a liquid. Upon close examination of the tail, biologists noticed that the tail is actually rotated like an axle and powered by a biological "rotary motor" made of 15 distinct parts.
The tiny flagellum gets together with a normally immobile protozoa inside the intestines of a termite. It attaches itself to the protozoa and moves it around so the wood can be digested and secreted as "food" for the termites. Without this arrangement between three unique organisms, the termite could not exist. How did this arrangement evolve? What resisted "survival of the fittest" and caused competing organisms to cooperate?
For the motor to work and have any benefit to the flagellum, all 15 parts must function perfectly. If one part fails, the motor will not turn. So the question is then passed back to the Evolutionists. "How did this motor evolve?" There is no possibility for gradual trial and error in developing the motor. It had to have all 15 parts already assembled. It couldn't be just a beneficial mutation. It must have been planned... designed.