I'm sure most everyone else is just as capable of attacking the argument without critiquing the person giving it.
OK, let's give it a go. I won't mention you at all. These are just some general corrections to statements made in this thread:
The use of the term 'humanoid' has nothing to do with taxonomy. It is not a biological classification. It just means 'human like'. Anyone using it more likely confused it with 'hominid'.
There aren't humans
and primates. Because humans
are primates.
Primates aren't similar to humans. That would be like someone saying that cars are similar to Lamborghinis.
One can tell the difference between any given primate and another. But one cannot differentiate between a primate and a human, because a human is a primate.
Chimps and bonobos aren't the closest primates to humans because they are on a different branch of the evolutionary tree. A closer primate would be Homo erectus, one of most recent ancestors and a lot closer in physical make up to us than any other primate.
Most biologists, when asked about any difference between a chimp and a human would invariably point out how close we are, sharing close to 99% of our dna.
There are actually mammals that could have been confused with humans - Homo erectus, who were very similar to us. But none extant.
There are 6 taxonomical kingdoms: Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia. We belong to the last one so we are most definitely part of the animal kingdom. As opposed to the fungi kingdom, or the plant kingdom.
No chimp remains could be confused with ancient pre human remains because chimps didn't exist at the same time as pre humans.