We want evidence of God, not evidence that lots of people believe in lots of totally different things that they call 'God'. That's one step worse than an ad populum fallacy. 
It's fascinating what posts you decide to address directly, what you avoid and how you choose to 'answer'. It looks like you have a belief that literally nothing can touch. If no contrary evidence could possibly change your mind, then your belief is irrational. Give me evidence of a God and I'll become a theist. What would change your mind?
Not sure I understand what you mean by 'evidence' that would make you a theist.
I always thought that being a theist is a faith position - so not based on objective evidence but based on subjective introspection e.g. you hear / read something that could be classified by society as 'of religion' or 'spiritual' - and you react to those abstract ideas, thoughts or concepts - e.g. they might resonate with values that you have an emotional and intellectual attachment to. And part of being a theist is that you attach value to faith.
If you have a reaction that includes exploring these abstract concepts further both philosophically and emotionally - you might find yourself attracted to or landing on a particular position for a while.
For example, I started reading bits of the Quran as an atheist to find holes and absurdities in it - I found value in being an atheist because the religious ideas I had been exposed to sounded so absurd to me. I was sure of my ability to find stuff to ridicule in the Quran. I went straight to the verses about women, as that seemed an obvious place to find ideas I would disagree with, but I surprised myself by not disagreeing with what I read. I ended up becoming a Muslim - which is a faith position. Of course, I could still find stuff to ridicule in the Quran if I read it literally, but if I don't take it literally I find a lot that triggers introspection that I value, and apparently I also value faith.
I must have found something that must be giving me some kind of add-value or must be meeting some kind of human need, otherwise I would not seek out or repeat the experience.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/in-control/201808/why-do-we-do-things-we-dont-want-to-do?msockid=37424fc5d3706b4a14025ab3d2bb6a0aAre you suggesting that critical thinking could remove the desire for the add-value that someone experiences from faith? How do you think that works? Surely that would only work if a person perceives the results of critical thinking to be of more personal value to them than the personal value they derive from the results of their faith position? What a person derives more value from isn't an objective position - it's aesthetics / personal taste.
So what would turn me back to being an atheist would be if there was a result I valued from being an atheist that appealed to me more than the value I get from being a theist.