Another fallacy, this time begging the question, you assume it shows design in order to prove it was designed.
I'm not saying it proves design (although it does suggest it). What I am saying is that a theory that excludes a designer is unable to explain how these machines exist/evolved.
Real design always implies intelligence, yes, but what you're seeing in biology is an illusion of design that disappears if you inspect things more closely. The human eye from an engineering perspective, for instance, is built upside down and backwards and has a blind spot as a consequence. If that shows design, the designer was incredibly sloppy and incompetent, but it doesn't, what it shows is a structure cobbled together in a minimally workable way from other pre-existing components.
You reason like this, "just because it appears designed doesn't mean it is designed," so grant me in turn to reason, "just because it appears cobbled doesn't mean it arose out of chaos."
The eyes of cephalopods are much better, the right way up and the right way around, with no blind spot. What are we to make of that, that god likes squids and octopuses better than us?
By your reasoning, the existence of wings on birds might show that God loves birds more than he loves humans?