Unless you've got your foot in the door via exotic abiogenesis. If speculation about aliens seeding life is taken seriously, then speculation that aliens seeded life AND guided it at certain points to produce intelligent beings like us would seem to be legit speculation as well, and that's where the damage to evolution theory comes in.
At the moment there is sufficient evidence to say that whilst the exact mechanism of abiogenesis is not known, the broad outline is already pretty clear - over hundreds of millions of years, simple compounds (like carbon monoxide, ammonia, sulfur dioxide, phosphates, and water) reacted to form more complex organic compounds due to the formation of free radicals from UV light, radiation and lightning. Some of the compounds formed would include amino acids and proteins, and in at least one location, groups of them collected in such a way that the whole collection was able to duplicate itself within the surrounding "soup".
That is why I said that one would actually need unequivocal evidence of manufacture in order to alter this narrative. An alien lab, 3.8-billion years old with machinery to make simple life would fit this requirement.