I am saying agnostics that argue against believing god does not exist cannot positively believe in anything (besides, perhaps, logic itself), or that they can find the idea that I created the universe then inserted myself into it any less reasonable than the idea of one divine creator. Nor could they find either of those more reasonable than the idea of hybrid monkey/unicorn/gremlins riding on santa sleighs and rotating around football players while rolling down mountains and drinking pepsi to be the form our divine creator. Basically, I am forcing them to take the ultimate agnostic position in all things, there is no reason for them to positively believe anything if they do not have absolute proof of anything. But, by the nature of these positions, they could not say "I know for certain we cannot know." and so they should exclude themselves from taking a position or arguing it because it contradicts itself, no? What they are really saying is "I believe we cannot know, based on my assumptions", then many call it stupid or moronic to take a positive belief. I hope I have sufficiently explained this, I can elaborate further if necessary.
My ultimate point? We do, and should have positive beliefs that are not based on the existence of absolute evidence or even any evidence at all (believing you're one person typing at that PC without any evidence provided or any claim even made, I simply assume it to be true). If we go by pure logic itself, then we should not positively believe anything, so what is the purpose of the word? It would be better to say we cannot positively know anything. I do not know god does not exist. I believe he does not.