Have at you.
The fossil record is one of the best arguments against evolution. For fossils to form, animals and plant life need to be buried quickly in mud or a similar substance. The uniformitarian model upon which evolutionism is based assumes long periods of sedimentation, a process that does not bury animals intact (unless the animal lies verrrry still and doesn't get eaten or decompose for thousands of years). The fossil record shouts catastrophism, not uniformitarianism upon which traditional evolution is based.
Carbon-14 dating IS a form of radiometric dating and is arguably the most reliable (back to about 14K years). Other forms of radiometric dating rely upon presuppositions which are circular in their reasoning (i.e. the "geologic column" shows a given fossil to have been buried 500K years ago according to the radiometric dating. "How" you ask, "did the evolutionist determine that the radiometric dating is correct?" By the location in the geologic column of the fossils, of course. )
Impact craters are not an evidence for evolution. Some claim they might be considered to be an evidence for an earth older than 6000 years, not because of the existence of the crater itself but rather, because a large impact would cause a world-wide meteorological catastrophe which evolutionists claim the Bible (or other ancient writings) would have recorded. Of course, the Bible is full of stories of great catastrophes. In fact, it talks of major meteor bombardments, global floods, massive changes in the earth's crusts, climactic mountain leveling earthquakes, etc. So, while interesting, the meteor crater idea is a bit weak as an argument on many fronts and it is certainly not "evidence" for evolution.
"Evolution" in bacteria? I assume you are speaking of micro-evolution here such as when bacteria becomes resistant to antibiotics? It is true that micro-evolution happens all around us and can be occasionally observed or even recreated in a lab. But even under major physical and emotional duress, bacteria have not been observed evolving into anything other than a slightly different type of bacteria.
When we talk "evolution" in a thread like this we are referring to the common descent of all life from a single ancestor. This might be called "true" evolution, "vertical" evolution, or "macroevolution" which entails very large steps in morphotype reconstruction. Of course, this has been debated ad nauseum on other threads in this and other boards where evolutionists claim that there is no difference between micro and macro evolution while creationists claim that the former should not even be termed evolution because it confuses the issue.
The science community is currently very creation science phobic and thus, you will see a lot of claims that one must proceed from an evolutionary world view in order to even be considered a scientist. Honest debate, therefore, is difficult unless you happen to run across the occasional person who doesn't retreat to the "creationism is not science" rubrik. These are rare individuals but when they turn up, even if they are an evolutionist, they are a breath of fresh air.