Here is a nice conversation between people of different beliefs, including your patron saint Richard Dawkins.... on 'why is there something instead of nothing?'.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dcellKvotyI
Watched the opening statements from all the participants but they were grindingly dull.
Why is there something rather than nothing? Perhaps more to the point, why is nobody talking about that question?
Dawkins didn't really say anything new, just that evolution explained the complexity and apparent design of life but at least he had the sense to recognise that he wasn't really qualified to talk about physics or cosmology which
might be more relevant. He mentioned a multiverse but that doesn't answer the question either.
Was Richard Swinburne
trying to be a dim and dull as he could? Droned on and on for ten minutes, making assumption after assumption and assertion after assertions. Didn't seem to get that a god would be something so doesn't answer the question.
Silvia Jonas wasn't much better. She doesn't seem to understand that mathematics isn't a science and apparently thought assuming a purpose for existence might answer the question. What!!? You can't have a purpose without something existing, so there is obviously no answer there. Didn't even seem to get that a purpose for existence was a religious idea either.
Jessica Frazier probably get closest to addressing the question but it's "who knows?", which is actually quite accurate. Unfortunately then collapsed into the daftness of the argument from contingency.
All of them seem stuck in the pre 20th century view of time and causality, which really isn't great when you're supposed to be thinking about deep questions.
Don't think I'll waste another hour on it.