Your freezer analogy means nothing: it is futile in respect to evidence of how life biochemically and environmentally came about.
Again, read the discussion history.
The freezer is not an analogy to biochemical processes.
It's an analogy to any scientific experiment and controlled environments.
If you're not going to bother to read attentively, I'm not gonna bother explaining it a 5th time.
Why have the best biochemists and geneticists have not been able to create life from precursor compounds and elements under fixed and controllable environmental conditions, mate?
Turn back time to 30 minutes before the Wright brothers had their successfull test flight and then rephrase that question to:
"why have the best engineers not been able to create a machine that flies through the air, mate?"
Or turn back time to 30 minutes before they built the first successfull atomic bomb and rephrase that question to:
"why have the best engineers and physicists not been able to create a nuclear weapon, mate?"
Do you expect scientists to solve all problems in under 5 minutes?
They are still working on it. What do you want me to say?
Your question is very stupid, sorry to say.
It's a hard problem, clearly. Do you know how many years Einstein worked on relativity? Just because you give up on problems after 5 minutes of trying doesn't mean everyone should.
And you expect this "event" to "have happened billions of years ago" like there was nothing to it.
I never once said this. I'm fine saying I don't know until someone comes up with an actual answer. For now, all I can say is that abiogenesis hypothesis are our best shot at solving this.
Get real and show the complexity, mate. The "freezer" analogy does not cut it. Not even close.
That's not the point of the analogy. Had you read my posts about that with some attention, you would know it.
But you didn't read attentively. Instead, you're just jumping at a perceived chance to knock on the scientific process and probably already preparing your next move to start preaching your faith-based religion.