You can think of me as unintelligent or uneducated, but in all honesty I really don't care. I read various things and come to my own conclusions, the same as you do. It seems to me that you're just upset because I don't share your view.
I've seen a lot of that from atheists, and find it strangely amusing. What exactly are they trying to "save" us from?

No one is upset at you for holding your own view points lad - people are frustrated that in a discussion about science your contribution is “I didn’t do well at school in maths or science” followed by “I think DNA is too complex to not come from God” (paraphrasing obviously)
I am mathematically adept (I was doing algebra in 7th grade), and I also am of the mind that DNA is too complex to occur randomly, to say nothing of actual evolution-capable unicellular life.
Evolution is fueled by mutation, reproduction, and death. So before it can kick in, a being capable of both self-replicating and dying must exist. Even basic bacteria have billions of precisely placed atoms. Statistically, the odds of such a thing just "happening" are so unimaginably huge, it's best to just say "impossible" and leave it at that. Flip 300 pennies and it's theoretically possible that you can get all heads... but you won't.
It's not making a claim to understanding, it's just a term to refer to the origin of life from lifelessness - as the thread demonstrates, we don't know what that process was.
Your typical non-believer seeks to find a way to redefine science so that it explains what it currently says is statistically impossible. I find it more realistic to look for origins that lie beyond the scientific. I respect their right to believe as they choose, but I'm not going to be fooled: they're running on faith, just like me.