Because it's a straw man, although now you're trying to change the subject. "Those statements do not appear in the scientific literature" presumes what kind of statements should and do appear in the scientific literature. I'm sure you're right that her statements as she wrote them aren't in the literature. The question is what that means. You assert that they don't appear because they are false, or perhaps more properly, that they are not the product of proper science. A better explanation is that they don't appear in that form because the form, regardless of topic, is not customary for journals. Conclusions drawn on a breadth of research are scientific conclusions in the same way that the conclusions in individual journal articles are scientific conclusions. It is the goal of science to accumulate such a breadth that generalizations such as Skeptic Ginger's become possible.
I'm not talking about the malaria vaccine. Skeptic Ginger summarized the relevant literature as showing that some beliefs in gods clearly evolved as myths. She noted the absence of any findings in the literature that beliefs in gods arose because there was evidence the gods were themselves real. She then defensibly drew a conclusion from the one-sided state of the evidence. That is science, whether you agree it is or not.
Can you stop swerving all over the map in your haste to escape?