I still find it funny whenever someone expands the P in my name. I mean, that is what it stands for, but it's still oddly amusing to me.
MonkeyHead went more into depth with it, but my objection to that claim, Bohandas, is twofold. A, Kids are dumb, and I say this as someone who just turned 18 this month. You can like/believe basically anything when you're a kid; less realistic beliefs are expected to be grown out of. B, if you were trying to equate theists/religious individuals with children on the basis of believing something you find ridiculous, I would point out that that is both dishonest and anti-contributory to the discussion.
Also, something pithy since I like making pithy sayings: Truth is hard to find.
The size, organization/scale, respectability, and intellectual accomplishments of those two groups of people, DwArfY, is radically different (though I admit I'm making assumptions on that last). Many/most apologists don't have merely a faith designed around 'it might be true'. That's Pascal's Wager. I take a bit of a different Wager, but in any case, that's not the point. Many of them have logical or evidence-dependent arguments for their beliefs. We may find them faulty, or believe the evidence should be interpreted differently. But you can't even get to that point in the debate, to that level of discussion which allows for everyone to come out more justified in the beliefs they now hold, and hopefully closer to the truth, if you just say it's ridiculous.
I mean, my real objection is that it's rude and people should respect each other's beliefs even while challenging them and their own, but nobody actually cares about that, in my experience.