How is any of this in any way whatsoever a retort to Eriku's points or in any way support for your ludicrous claim that Dawkins is a polytheistic creationist?
Nonetheless, let's persevere. Here's an article, from 2014, with direct quotes from Dawkins on virtually everyone off the points that you've misrepresented above, and covering your absurd claims of him being an intelligent design supporting creationist due to his opinions on aliens. It's using his actual words, in context, and it illuminates your total misrepresentation of his positions. I have bolded aspects that are particularly salient to your false claims. I also suspect that you've seen this article, or a version of it, given your comments and have either failed to understand his position, or deliberately chosen not to. I have no doubt this is a pointless exercise given your form on the matter but here you are:
Dawkins pondered whether the way certain animals have evolved on Earth has been random, or followed a path that would be similar for any alien life forms.
In particular, he discussed how organs such as eyes, on a world where light was abundant, would be very likely to evolve in a similar way.
And even things such as religion, as society develops, would be shared by humans and an intelligent extraterrestrial race.
On whether aliens might have their own religions Dawkins said: 'I think it wouldn't be totally unsurprising.
After all, he said, religion has arisen in every single civilisation that anthropologists have ever looked at that.
'I suppose it's plausible that any alien life form which is on the way to developing the sort of technology that's capable of reaching us would be likely to go through a preliminary phase of uncertain groping in the dark,' he added.
'Before they hit upon truths like Newton's laws, which are universal, and Einstein's theory of gravitation, which is also universal, they might well go through a phase of groping in the dark.
'It's something we might recognise as religion.'
Dawkins said he wants biologists to start to consider what other life might be like in the event we discover we are not alone - which he claims is increasingly unlikely.
"The number of stars in current estimates is 10 to the power of 22, and it looks as though most of them have planets, so it's feasible to say the number of planets is in excess of 10 to the power of 22", said Dawkins.
He said It would seem to be rash to predict we're the only life form in the entire universe.
'On the other hand if there was only one planet that has life then it has to be this one, because here we are,' he said.
'The alternative is to say yes, we are alone. If you want to believe that then the origin of life on this planet has to be a quite staggeringly improbable event.'
'So we're left with the rather paradoxical result that people who are trying to work out how life originated on this planet are totally wasting their time, because the theory we're seeking is not a plausible theory, it's an exceedingly implausible theory.'
Dawkins explained that if there is a plausible theory for the origin of life - one that has yet to be put forward - then there's going to be 'lots and lots' of life in the universe.
'I'm just pointing out a kind of incompatibility between the belief that we're unique, which many want to believe, and hunting for the origin of life on this planet, which is a lost cause if you want to believe that,' he continued.
'I think there's lots of life in the universe, but that's just a hunch. It may still be very rare; it may be so rare that there are only a billion of them.
Dawkins said if there are only a billion life forms then they will probably be so spaced out from each other that they'll never know each other and never come in contact.
He believes if they do come in contact, it will almost certainly be by radio than by actually bodily meeting.
'That's because radio waves get propagated in all directions, and so we could be being bathed in radio emissions of some extraterrestrial civilisation,' he said.
On what he expects to be found first, alien life or the origin of our life, Dawkins said: 'I would think finding a plausible theory of the origin of our life.
'If we can find a plausible theory then that pretty much means there's lots of life.'
One opinion he would like to distance himself from, though, is the possibility of life on Earth being seeded by aliens.
'I was interviewed by a creationist film and the man said "can you think of any conceivable way in which life on this planet could have been intelligently designed?"
'So I said the only conceivable way I can think of is not God, which is what [he wanted] me to say, but alien seeding. But I explicitly said I do not believe in alien seeding.
'If you really press me to think of how intelligence could ever have designed life on this planet, the only possibility would be alien seeding.
'That's very different from saying I believe in alien seeding. It's been distorted possibly maliciously by a creationist.'
If there is life out there, however, Dawkins thinks it is likely they follow similar evolutionary principles to life on Earth.
'Does life have to be Darwinian? I think it does,' he said.
'I don't think there's another theory that's been suggested that could give rise to the sort of organised complexity that we call life. I'm kind of betting my shirt on Darwinism.'