SoulWeaver, you're playing with the boundaries for classification to try to prove something, but you're failing to take into account that evolutionary process itself inherently supersedes the boundaries of classification: animals mutate, and eventual become very different things. It is humankind who classifies it. It does not itself require our classification for it to be a process that happens anyway.
Fish evolved into amphibians, and amphibians evolved into reptiles, and reptiles evolved into birds. It doesn't matter to the process's validity what boundary we place on what is a 'kind' or what is a 'phylum' or a 'genus', they are just man made terms to allow us to sort things into categories for easier examination. The basis for the theory still stands; animals mutate over long periods of time,change environments, die off, some are selected, mutations are carried over to new generations, some prevail, some don't, and we end up, today with huge variation across the globe because of all of these factors.
What boundary do you want to set? I mean, do you want me to show you a 'horse kind', that magically turned into a 'dog kind'? Such a request is utterly intellectually dishonest and ignorant of how the progression within like species occurs. Of course a horse doesn't just evolve into a dog, (and the reason we classify 'species' is exactly for that reason; dogs reproduce with like species, horses reproduce with like species). That doesn't mean that evolution is false, it means that certain evolved genes are reproductively compatible with other certain evolved genes.