And maybe they did say that. I'd like to see the unedited interview footage.
Any interviewer trying to elicit "gotchas" will edit out the smartest answers. I can't believe that all the people who appeared on Jay Leno's "Jaywalking" segments were really that stupid. I do wonder about the people in Rick Mercer's "Talking to Americans" show - he even 'got' a couple of politicians. But to his credit he did include the kid who pointed out how silly the question was in the first place.
The thing about "shop" and "stop" is irrelevant to the purpose of the video. It's like building up a scenario where a plane full of Canadians and Americans crashes exactly on the 49th parallel. In which country do you bury the survivors?
Yeah, it's not even hard to explain or understand. I have seen it with my own eyes, layers of rock curving upward, "climbing" up over other sections with the same layers. I can show you where you can take a hike and see it.
I live about 2.5-3 hours from the Rocky Mountains (can just see them from a high point on the east hill of my city, if the air is clear enough). I remember how the first trip I took through the Rockies after taking physical geography in college was so much more meaningful after I really understood what I was looking at. I'd always loved the mountains before and had some idea of plate tectonics, but this time it felt much more special and awe-inspiring to think of how long it took for these mountains and everything associated with them to form and how the glaciers made their own changes.
As for fossils... I live in one of the areas of this planet that is rich in dinosaur fossils. I haven't found any of those, but I've found a couple of others.
The video is good for a laugh. The fellow is using marine fossils on mountains as evidence of the Genesis flood? The obvious question is, if the flood was worldwide and deep enough to cover Mt Everest, where did all that water come from, and where did it go? Did a drain open up in the bottom of the ocean?
"There's a hole in the bottom of the sea... there's a hole in the bottom of the sea... there's a hole... there's a hole... there's a hole in the bottom of the sea!"
Yep, pretty neat trick, given that nobody back then (when the Noah story supposedly took place) had oxygen bottles with them. And for some reason, not one of these flood enthusiasts will ever tell me how the animals of North America knew to emigrate to Asia to get on the Ark.
Ditto for the Antarctic animals. The desert is not any sort of natural habitat for any of those species, so how did they survive the trip there? Some of the Antarctic penguins are already in trouble because the ocean down there is warming up. Food is becoming a problem for them.
As for earthquakes... we've had a few here, but they're caused by fracking. This is not a good thing. Nothing here is set up for earthquakes; the natural disasters we're used to here include wind storms, tornadoes, blizzards, forest fires, and floods.