It is no wonder you get the responses that you don’t like...Yes. This is at least the third, and you still show no signs of understanding what was written to you, and also no curiosity what that is. I've been referring to a cognitive bias wherein the meanings of words are converted from what the words say to something else. You don't seem to understand that. Nothing you've written suggests that you do.
I was addressing your recommendation to investigate supernaturalism. The vampire analogy is very apt. I recommended that you investigate claims of vampires existing, an unfalsifiable claim like other claims of supernaturalism including god claims. You haven't, both because you can't, which was my point regarding other forms of supernaturalism, and because you understand that it would be a waste of your time to give the subject any further consideration than you already have.
The two are perfectly analogous, but you probably don't agree. Most theists are offended at having their unfalsifiable claims treated the same as all others. But why should that matter to somebody making the argument?
I wonder if people who believe that vampires but not gods exist would also be offended by that comparison. Vampires are real, but not gods, they might exclaim. They deserve special exemption, they might say.
We are back to the original statement that I made…
Maybe the question really is… “If you don’t rule out supernaturalism, why don’t you investigate it and pursue the possibility? What is the “why?"
Certainly doing nothing can’t be called an “investigation”.