Then you are admitting that there is no objective evidence of God. If there is objective evidence then we can apply the scientific method.
No, I didn't admit that. Because while the creation itself wasn't observed by us, the results of it can be. And I think the sheer complexity of even the simplest life defies it's naturalistic creation and is evidence for deliberate creation.
I am still not seeing any objective evidence to back your claims. All I am seeing is empty assertions.
That's OK, I don't expect us to agree.
Why would the first life require proteins or DNA? RNA can act as both a genetic molecule and as an enzyme which fills the roles of both DNA and proteins.
Hypothesizing is fine, but that's only the beginning of scientific investigation. Scientific conclusions are based on experimentation, observation, and repeatability. Try browsing Eugene Koonin's paper. Googling his name and "multiverse" will find it. It sounds like he's been frustrated by the RNA world and is resorting to the "infinite multiverse" and the "cosmological model of eternal inflation". I have to admit I admire him for his honesty and tenaciousness.
Should someone actually turn a strand of RNA into a cell I'm certain we'll all hear of it. Until then, the idea is just a hypothesis. And making hypotheses is the easy part.
The minimal genome project only applies to modern life that has evolved over 4 billion years, not abiogenesis.
What the minimal genome projects are demonstrating is that there must be hundreds of distinct proteins being created to keep the simplest cell alive, even in an ideal medium.
Why in the world do cells require so many proteins? Here's one reason:
Did you know that DNA is easily damaged and must be regularly repaired for a cell to survive? Here's one of the repair mechanisms that I think is cool. It involves two separate proteins. They clamp down onto the DNA strand in separate places and one of them fires an electron at the other. If the second one receives it, the DNA is fine and the proteins disconnect (unbroken DNA conducts electricity). If the second one doesn't receive it, it "walks" down the DNA until it finds the broken piece and repairs it. Cool, huh?
Without such mechanisms, a cell's DNA will not maintain it's integrity and the cell will not remain viable. So for cellular life, many such things must be in place. I don't think their natural assembly is even remotely possible, therefore they were assembled purposefully.