Even with perfect conditions which would have never existed on earth, the experiment was unable to deny the insurmountable issue of chirality.
Not insurmountable:
The Origin of Life
(Personally, I wouldn't recommend getting one's science information from Answers in Genesis. They tend to lie given their agenda.)
Unsupportable assertion. "Must have been, so it was" doesn't work here.
I suggest familiarizing yourself with origins of life research. Nobody thinks that the first life would have had complex strings of DNA.
That's YOUR lie, not mine.
No, this is the conclusion of various branches of science from the last couple hundred years of scientific investigation of the Earth. If you want to deny all of science, that's your problem, not mine.
So which should I believe, my own senses or the unsupported claims of an unbeliever?
There are two things to consider here.
First, senses lie. Or rather, the brain is capable of replicating experiences that appear to be derived from external stimuli that may not be. Hallucinations are a perfect example, where a person may see and hear things that aren't real.
I myself experience hypnopompic hallucinations, which is when one wakes up but is still in a dream-state. I have woken up in the middle of the night and seen things in my room (sometimes creepy things like ghosts and monsters) that aren't actually there. Even weirder is how this dream imagery overlays real imagery (i.e. my room) and can look vividly real at the time. Yet ultimately it's just a product of the mind.
The second consideration is that as I said, I do believe people experience real phenomena and this can include hallucinogenic experiences. However, it's the attribution of the experience that I question. Just because a person sees a ghost in their bedroom at night doesn't mean that it's necessarily supernatural in nature.
Try seeing them when you're wide awake. Try seeing pool balls rolling around on a table struck by an unseen force. Try hearing perfectly timed footsteps where nobody is there or seeing demonic images that perfectly math the images others have seen. The supernatural exists in the real world. You denying it changes nothing.
I certainly can't speak to the specific experiences everyone else has had. However, again just because people experience a particular phenomena doesn't automatically equate to a supernatural experience. There is a certain standard of evidence needed to truly corroborate such experiences with the supernatural and in my experience of reading such accounts, the evidence is sorely lacking.
And when you really think about it, ascribing some of these things to the supernatural seems a bit silly. Like the pool balls. Do ghosts and demons really fancy a game of billiards?
Says you. Experts can't explain them.
That's quite a generalist statement, so forgive me if I take it with a grain of salt. Second, lack of explanation for something is not the same thing as something being supernatural.
There was a time when people couldn't explain the weather and indeed ascribed supernatural origins to it, but that didn't make it supernatural.
It surprises you that man doesn't have all the answers??
Where were you when God spoke the universe into existence?
You're missing the point. It's case where the evidence points to one thing (an Earth much older than 6000 years), but they are trying to explain away what they found with ad hoc explanations including possibly invoking arbitrary supernaturalism.
That's not science.
He sent people like me to warn you, so that in the end you will be without excuse.
If God really wanted to warn me, they'd send someone more convincing than you.