I think anyone who has never actually read a sound Creationist defense on the internet or in book form (yes, "sound Creationist defense" does exist) would be rather surprised at what one can accurately infer from scientific evidence. I can guarantee that the Ham museum will surprise many doubters with the amount of scientific evidence presented. Of course, evolution is not technically a science, but rather a naturalistic view of history. The Creation debate is not a scientific debate, but an historic debate.
Creationism is not, "The Bible said it and I believe it, so there." Creationism is more along the lines of how do you explain "irreducible complexity", does the history of the earth suggest naturalistic uniformity or cataclysmic change, from whence comes the information needed to produce "macroevolution" (suggested by evolutionists to arrise from chance genetic mutation without any documentation or reasonability whatsoever), and the like....
Here's a simple test to get people thinking (though this does not disprove evolution).
The universe came into existence by one of four methods:
1) It has always been.
2) It is an illusion.
3) It came out of nothing by natural means.
4) It came out of nothing by supernatural means.
1) is disproved by the law of entropy. Matter and energy within a closed system are constantly running down. Disintegration would occur. The idea that the universe expands and contracts on itself perpetually might be feasible if you have an external infusion of energy, and thus would lend itself to supernaturalism. By natural means, the universe can not have always been.
2) is not scientific. Disproved by common experience.
3) is disproved by the Conservation Laws. Matter cannot be created or destroyed.
4) Is speculative.
So, we are left with the conclusion that either #1 or #4 are true, but either one can only be true by supernatural means. Therefore, our origins are supernatural. Science will concede this if you read books on the Big Bang, for within the first 0.000008 seconds, the laws of physics no longer apply, and therefore the action becomes, by definition, "supernatural."