But to say something is "not impossible" surely leaves open the option of it being "possible".
If the "not impossible" is a proposal that is grounded on what is currently in place: say that the storage potential of batteries for electric cars could be increased by 20% over the next 5 years due to technical advances, then that proposal is "not impossible" since it is informed speculation based on what is extant, even if it turned out to be wrong.
However if "not impossible" is the response to a claim like 'an after life' that has no grounding in logic, reason or credible evidence then surely the correct response is say that without any grounding in logic, reason or credible evidence then the claim is currently no more than meaningless white noise, and that no assessment of it's 'possibility' can therefore be made. In essence, the 'impossible/possible' categorisation can't even be considered since it can't apply as things stand.