The amount of irony and projection here is staggering, if not atypical. Are you suggesting that most or all of the billions of people who have identified as theists in the past two millennia arrived at their shared conclusion through independent thought and experience, and that childhood indoctrination, social pressure, and political expediency had nothing to do with it? Has “society” ever burned thousands of people alive at the stake for NOT “supporting or participating” in “agnosticism”, swearing, drugs, alcohol, or LGBTQ? Can you educate me as to how many wars have been fought over these things? I seem to have overlooked the extensive historical records of the masses of poor souls who were ostracized, imprisoned, tortured, executed, or otherwise persecuted for bravely refusing to bow down at the altar of Doubt, indulge in “degenerate” behavior, or stand up for sexual deviants.
Judging by your level of reasoning, I’m going to guess that you’re still very young (about 12, if we’re being charitable), in which case you’ve got plenty of time to do your homework on the topic you profess to be interested in, certainly enough to do more than make random posts on art forums. There are plenty of books that offer a rigorous defense of atheism. You might consider skipping Dawkins, Hitchens, and Harris (as entertaining and provocative as they are) and go straight to:
The System of Nature by Baron d’Holbach
Why I Became an Atheist by John W. Loftus
The Christian Delusion by John W. Loftus et al.
The Miracle of Theism by J. L. Mackie
Atheism: A Philosophical Justification by Michael L. Martin
Testament by Jean Meslier
Arguing About Gods by Graham Oppy
Atheism: The Case Against God by George H. Smith
If you manage to get through any of these texts, you may, if nothing else, find yourself a little less mystified as to why not everyone accepts the existence of a creator as something obvious and irrefutable.