No it is a sleight of hand because an argument is being deployed which works in everyday situations, indeed it seems abundantly clear beyond all reasonable doubt that things exist because thing(s) made them.
But then surely that should tell you that counter arguments are wrong?
One of the reasons I keep bringing up properties of truth here is because one is illustrated here. For example:
If I said that Theresa May is the President of the United States, I could show that this is false by showing that Donald Trump is the President of the United States. The counter-example is true, therefore my original assertion is false.
However, the reasoning fails for first causes which by definition are not made by something else
Or alternatively, it exposes a flaw in the reasoning. As Vlad tried to explain a couple of pages back in his
#29336, if a first cause is eternal, it needs no explanation. The only alternative is to have things creating themselves from nothing. There is no evidence to support this, the physics of the natural world contradict it (Newton's conservation of xxx laws, for example), and the best that philosophy can apparently come up with is the argument from incredulity, which only renders its position as unfalsifiable by science's own standards!!