What? Amino acids don't need sulfur to survive. They are molecules, not alive. The point is that it has been shown that amino acids could be more easily formed than originally thought, and amino acids are the base unit of proteins. Electrical charges hitting large pools of water are conducted, spreading the electricity and therefore increasing the odds of being hit by the charge.
/quote from other thread
And how do a bunch of amino acids suddenly become a cell? To illustrate my point:
1. Get a wooden ladder and disassemble it.
2. Bring all the parts to a second story balcony and drop them off of it.
3. Repeat until it forms a completed ladder.
Will it ever work? I don't think so. It's theoretically possible for them to create a ladder when they land, but it's never going to happen. A cell is many times more complex than a ladder, and I don't see the ladder putting itself together.