it would be evidence that it takes an intelligent being to create life
No, it would be evidence that chemicals can passively organize themselves into living cells. Intelligence gathers the components to observe, but it does not cause them to do what chemicals do without intelligent oversight. There is good evidence that life arises spontaneously wherever condition necessary to support it exist. Those conditions include the necessary ingredients, a heat bath, deep time, and likely the absence of other life. Thermodynamics does the rest.
We don't have that kind of time in our labs, so we bring the components together and sit back and watch them blindly self-organize according to the laws of physics and chemistry. That is not an argument that abiogenesis requires intelligence, although intelligence likely requires prior abiogenesis (and subsequent evolution)
But it reintroduces the point that the faith-based thinker who asks for evidence as if it would convince him is misrepresenting himself. Where's your evidence for abiogenesis, he asks. Right here, he's told. Well that's not evidence for abiogenesis but for intelligent design, he then says. I'm pretty sure that if I had the power to recreate early earth and you and I watched life come into existence over how many millions of years that took with no active intervention, it wouldn't change your opinion that that never happened, because that opinion is not based in evidence and can't be budged by it.
Didn't you just say that life is meaningless? Didn't the book ask "What do people gain from all their labors at which they toil under the sun?" My answer is that they can gain much. Now the book calls financial success, and the health, freedom, and leisure necessary to enjoy them, a gift. I agree. These are among the things that give life meaning. Add love, beauty, and freedom from shame and remorse, and that's a pretty meaningful and satisfying life.
Only because God gives the ability to enjoy those things.
Aren't you contradicting yourself now? You say life is meaningless without theism. I say that I find meaning there without it. Now you want to say that that is because of the god that I don't believe exists, that it rewards unbelievers. So how would a god belief add meaning to life?
You won't find the meaning of life in your holy book, nor by looking through the nihilistic lenses of a faith-based confirmation bias that shows you the empty world that you have accepted exists by faith.
I already have.
You just told me that life is meaningless without a god belief and presumably a belief that one will be included in an afterlife. That's where you say you find meaning - in a time and place you hope exists.
But rest assured, I don't believe you mean that. I believe you find meaning in life the same way I do. You call yourself wildswanderer, and based on what you said about your life, I'm imagining you as an outdoorsman. Such people generally find meaning in the activities of daily life and in their connection to nature. They may give lip service to God in these moments, but they are having the same experience as atheists doing the same things without a god belief. These are the things that actually give life the meaning it has, not hope, and you share in that.