It is a perfectly logical argument.
You have accused me of telling blatant lies.
You claim that every event must be determined by previous events, which implies that every event involved in my thought processes can only be inevitable reactions to previous events. There is no mechanism for telling a deliberate lie within such a scenario.
I need to learn more about logic as I am lacking, but I can see that you have not made a logical argument. I think you mean you have made a statement that makes sense to you, but that is not logic.
I have been watching the atheist experience, and the host is very good at logic and to use his example of logic 101 here is an example.
You start with some premises link them to get a conclusion. IF you accept the premises, then you have to accept the conclusion otherwise you're being irrational.
So here goes.
Premise 1. All men are mortal.
Premise 2. John is a man.
Conclusion. John is mortal.
That is a logical argument.
But just because you can form an internally consistent argument, it does not mean the conclusion is true. For that you would have to accept the premises.
So here goes.
Premise 1. All unicorns wear pink hats on Tuesday.
Premise 2. Today is Tuesday.
Conclusion. All unicorns will be wearing pink hats.