There is double jeopardy from his position.
That you think there are two errors in his thinking does not make this a 'double jeapordy' situation.
Firstly he only believes he's right about faith.
Doesn't everybody? If you didn't think you were right you'd believe something different and think that was right.
2.He's actually wrong about faith
He's actually not.
Since we can talk rationally about the merits of any belief.
Not if it's a religious belief, predicated on the idea of a being that hide its existence through magic. You can't rationalise with or against an argument predicated on the suspension of the laws of reality.
O.