(Disclaimer: This transcript is auto-generated and may contain mistakes.) This is fact. This is from March 16th of 2006. It says physicists announced Thursday that they now have the smoking gun that shows that the universe went through extremely rapid expansion in the moments after the Big Bang. Growing from the size of a marble. So these people are a little more moderate. Okay, it was the size of a marble. The whole universe. And I thought the Native Americans believed some weird stuff about how everything came off a turtle's back or something. That started to sound pretty good. Anyway, it all came from the size of a marble. Listen to this. It grew from the size of a marble to a volume larger than all of observable space in less than a trillion trillionth of a second. I mean, how could it go that fast? In a trillion, not in a trillion, oh no. A trillion trillionth of a second. It went from the size of a marble to bigger than anything we can observe with any telescope, with any equipment that we have in a trillion trillionth of a second. That you think that this is real, right? The Bible is a fairy tale, right? That this is real. And this is the garbage that these idiots at ASU and these idiots at the public school and these idiots in the scientific so-called community want us to just believe this and they think we're stupid and they're right because people believe in this. So people are stupid then. Because anybody who believes this is a fool. And that's why it says the fool has said in his heart there is no God. You say, well, how did they come up with it? How did they come to this conclusion? Oh, well, once you see how they came to conclusion, it might start to make sense to you. The discovery, which involves an analysis of variations in the brightness of microwave radiation, is the first direct evidence. Yeah, that's what I've been looking for, just some real clear, just direct evidence I can sink my teeth into. And I found it from this brightness and waves. It gives us our first clues about how inflation took place, said Michael Turner. This is absolutely amazing. Brian Green, a Columbia University physicist, said, the observations are spectacular and the conclusions are stunning. Researchers found the evidence for inflation by looking at a faint glow that permeates the universe. That glow, known as the cosmic microwave background, was produced when the universe was about 300,000 years old, long after inflation had done its work. Earlier studies of WMAP data have determined that the universe is 13.7 billion years old, give or take a few hundred thousand years. What's a few hundred thousand years between friends, right? Then it added, it amazes me that we can say anything at all about what transpired in the first trillionth of a second of the universe. I'm pretty amazed that you talked about it.