But we are back to who decides what is necessary suffering or immoral suffering.
Amongst many, many others; me. The person going through it. The person seeing his children, particularly, going through it. With a perfect deity ANY suffering is immoral.
Surely the entity which has maximal knowledge.
If it weren't suggested to have absolute power, yes - if it were limited in capacity, but could in theory design the least bad creation. That's not the suggestion, though.
Those suggesting other physics would be better need to make their case although I suspect such physics would collapse into irrationality and chaos even before we consider the moral implications.
Again, not an issue with an omnipotent deity who doesn't need the system to be self-sufficient, even if there weren't better self-sufficient designs.
I think you rather overestimate yourself and your proneness to unintended consequences.
I overestimate my proneness to unintended consequences? Even if that made sense - I think you mean the opposite - it still doesn't matter with an omnipotent, omniscient deity, as any 'unintended consequence' (which is meaningless in the face of omniscience) who can intervene on a whim with literally negligible personal impact.
You have though brought up another complaint that God doesn’t intervene enough. They of course mean that God should be rescinding his laws quite frequently. That demand is the equivalent of wanting a different physics.
Yes. If there is an omniscient, omnipotent deity, the system could be better - I'm not bothered which way of it being better your purported deity would choose, but the fact they haven't is another strand of evidence that the whole notion is nonsense.
God didn’t create people only to make them suffer.
There is no apparently sensible reason why a God would make people; the story, though, suggests that it did, and subsequent to that we suffer. It's not really that important if there are other aspects to life, or whether you're happy with the balance. The fact is that an omnipotent, omniscient deity could create a reality for people where they did not suffer; we are here for God's reasons, not ours, why should we have to suffer for God's benefit?
Prior to the fall people were in perfect unbroken communion with God and would have enjoyed that through suffering and through everything until they came through to the next life.
If you think the Garden of Eden is a true story, I'm afraid we have issues that go way, way beyond whether there's suffering in the world, but even if you do: God put the tree where it could be reached by a creation he gave curiosity, but denied wisdom, and therefore this remains God's fault.
If you don't think the Garden of Eden is a true story, man's 'fall' is a result of the human nature that your religion says is part of what God made us and is, therefore, still a part of God's design and God's fault.
O.