You just pretend you can be some kind of super-objective hyper-relativist mega-fair and Schrodingerizing everything and everyone, when whenever I read your other comments it's clear you never behave, think or write like that. You just have your own beliefs backed up by your experience and evidence or whatever and are just assertive about them. Then you make an exception to this one question out of... nothing really.
You seem to have a fundamental misconception about the way I think about the world.
In order to believe that something must be true, I accept there must be evidence that it is true. Conversely, for me to believe something is false - or better put, the opposite to be true, I require evidence of that. If I have no evidence, then I typically don't render firm judgement either way. In this context, I'll argue just as vehemently against someone who asserts there is no God as someone who asserts there is. I don't have a problem with atheists who claim there is no enough evidence to substantiate the existence of God because that is half of my belief set.
If a person believes something to be true, or the opposite of that thing to be true, then either they have evidence for it or they're full of crap. This does not mean I have a problem with believing something should be treated as false because of a lack of evidence that it is true (this is the scientific method); it's just an overstep to then assert that the opposite is true (the opposite may be true or false).
Experimental hypothesis: "The Christian God exists."
Null hypothesis: The experimental hypothesis is false.
Poor evidence presented for the experimental hypothesis; it fails; the null hypothesis is adopted.
Experimental hypothesis: "The Christian God does not exist."
Null hypothesis: The experimental hypothesis is false.
Poor evidence presented for the experimental hypothesis; it fails; the null hypothesis is adopted.
Note that neither case actually says if the opposite is true when the experimental hypothesis fails. This is an important distinction, because science is never about just two options; we merely frame hypothesis testing that way for the purpose of the scientific method. There technically exists a conceptual space where both experimental hypotheses fail and both nulls are adopted. Is this paradoxical? Absolutely - if we can't find evidence that something exists, then we should immediately be able to prove it does not exist according to conventional thought, but that is not the way science works. Take the Higgs-Boson: its existence and function was predicted for years, yet could never be proven, yet could never be disproven (Hi Schroedinger, you're appearing a lot around here lately). Finally we found evidence that indeed supports its existence. Paradox resolved. Possible with God? Unlikely. From a rationalist philosophical perspective, God and Schroedinger's Cat are one and the same.