Oh dear. The point of this has completely gone over your head.
Why do you claim your god is real but the FSM is imaginary? Why can't it be the other way around? Or perhaps, they are both imaginary.
What you did is called "question begging". It is a fallacious argument where you assume the conclusion in your first premise.
Of course it is "fair". The FSM is the god of the Pastafarian religion. How dare you disrespect it like that!
Ah, so the most popular god is the real one.
In both cases, there is only hearsay and claims. There is no actual evidence for either. You seem to be saying that if enough people believe in an idea, it is probably true. I'm sure you can see the fatal flaw there.
"Comparable" in what way?
Your argument here would apply to Christianity vs the Roman Pantheon in the 1st/2nd centuries. Also to Islam vs Arab Paganism in the 7th century.
By your argument, we can dismiss Christianity and Islam in favour of Roman and Arab Paganism.
Is that really what you are trying to say?
To the rational sceptic, extraordinary claims with no supporting evidence can be dismissed, regardless of how many people have been raised from infancy to believe them. Childhood indoctrination into an ideology is not a sign of its truth.
Why do you keep referring to the FSM as something from a children's book? It is a god of a religion. A religion followed by millions, if not fewer. Less of the blasphemy please!
Flying Spaghetti Monster - Wikipedia
You seem to have ben misinformed. There are no first-hand, eye-witness accounts of Moses or even Jesus. Some historians also question whether the Muhammad of the Quran was an actual, historical figure.
Just to reiterate, you have missed the point of this argument.
@JerryMyers claimed that if I cannot disprove the existence of the god of the Quran, then that is evidence that said god exists.
Therefore, if he cannot disprove the existence of the FSM, then that is evidence for the existence of the FSM.
QED.
Your fallacious argument ad populum has no bearing on that.