Vlad the Irrationalist,
It is a statement of fact, you can't! what it means is I can't prove God and you cannot disprove God. Nothing controversial there.
Yes, and if I was asserting “true for you too” leprechauns”, you challenged me on the claim, and I replied, “You can’t disprove them either though” presumably you’d infer that I was trying to make a point of some kind wouldn’t you?
I merely ask what point you thought you were making
if not for an incomplete NPF. If your answer is, “I refuse to answer that” then just say so instead of indulging in all the diversionary stuff.
Are you still hoping that people will still think that inability to prove God means God is disproved?
That is a fallacy.
So is a straw man Why bother with the lie?
What we do seem to have is people who, being in that position assume atheism or assume atheism because ofthat...or act as though God does not exist.
What warrant do they have for that kind of commitment?
The “warrant” as you put it is that neither you nor anyone else so far as atheists are aware have managed a cogent reason to think there are gods, and it requires no more “commitment” to live accordingly than you require a commitment to live on the assumption that there are no leprechauns.
Why is this difficult for you to grasp?
As for the not NPF equals an NPF with bit's missing, I'm afraid a miss is as good as a mile and that just isn't true an NPF with bit's missing is not an NPF. A car with the wheels off is a car. There is nothing missing from the statements made, the are not incomplete NPF and even if there were you could not say whether it were wings or wheels which were missing from your car.
Stop lying. The bit missing – and still missing – is the explanation for what you intended when you wrote, “but you can’t disprove it either”. If you want to keep it a secret that’s up to you, but you must expect to be judged accordingly.