"and if you believe that god created man using evolution, it's possible YOU'RE reaching from some sort of compromise between religion and logic."
Just as the non-existence of reality is possible. Really, I see no difficulty with such a claim, that God, being responsible for existence of reality, would therefore be responsible for the process we call evolution. I don't see the reach.
"but, the god hypothesis lost footing a long time ago."
God as a hypothesis never had any footing, despite it's scholarly support. If you are examining the existence of God through a scientific process you've missed the point of religion, the spirituality, that which transends the apparent (physical) world.
"should anarchy be legal?"
If there is a legal system in place that could regulate "anarchy" you, at best, have an unusual lack of legal control, but you certainly would not have anarchy.
"if god created man then god is an asshole. to have the power of god and have to add misery and suffering to the equation is stupid. why not give man a full life of bliss? what the fuck is with the child molesters? for what reason did god create them?"
Ahh, the problem of evil, this is not a new objection, nor is it an objection to laugh at - such arguments carry a great deal of weight, though, a few responses surface, most notably the concept of freewill. If God is to allow man freewill, God must also allow evil (well, according to some philosophers).
Baked Jesus - I wonder what Stephen Roberts would say to the following:
'My religious beliefs and belief in God are rooted in my own personal spiritual experience. In the course of this experience my faith tradition has, thus far, satisfied my need for spiritual instruction.'
I find it odd that the belief in God is threatening to so many people. I am an ashiest, yet I have no trouble seeing the wisdom in the faith traditions. Certainly, there are members of each faith that are foolish to say the best for them - these fundamentalists who demand that you must believe as they do or you'll suffer some undesirable eternal fate - it's silly. My best analogy for the whole thing:
Everyone is trying to reach the top of the same mountain - we all seek happiness, true happiness, to be content with ourselves and our lives, and live happily regardless of whatever ills may befall us. It does not matter if you can admit this for yourself, you, me, everyone you know, wants to be happy. Happiness is the top of the mountain. And, as with all destinations, there are countless ways to arrive at the destination, as many paths as there are travelers - and there must be as many paths as travelers because we all depart from different locations on our path up this mountain. Who is to say that one path is superior to another? They all lead to the same place. If the Bible has laid out a path that you can understand, a path that works for you, bless you! If the teachings of Buddha, if the Upanishads or Koran, or whatever guidance you have found provides a path to the top of the mountain, a path that works for you, bless you on that path.
Even if you are like me, spiritually reluctant (to say the least!), we still are trying to get to the top of that mountain. Perhaps you have found a path that is not explained in a spiritual context - again, bless you on your path.
For an atheist to demand that there is no God and that belief in God if foolish is just as outrageous and dogmatic as the televangelist demanding that either you repent or you'll go to hell. Both claims follow the same thought process - both demand something that no evidence can be collected for or against.