You are not God so you are not All-Knowing or All-Wise, and as such do not know what suffering is uncalled for; lacking good reason; unwarranted.
Sure we do. It's easy to identify suffering that serves no constructive purpose. You don't allow yourself to think like that, which is common in the Abrahamic religions. You are taught that that is blasphemy, arrogance, but I see it as using my mind in its natural capacity. This is what minds can do - analyze, imagine, speculate, contemplate. But doing so isn't good for the religions. Freethinking is anathema to dogma.
All you have is an ego-based personal opinion about the way the world should be if God is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent.
Yes, although I word it as what kind of deity I would be with these same values and those powers omniscience and omnipotence. You seem to think egos are a bad thing the way use use the word. I disagree. That attitude serves those who would have you sacrifice your ego to theirs. If you've been convinced that the meek are blessed, this would be why.
if God rescued everyone like Superman that would not be benevolent because it would negate the entire purpose of this life.
I don't think you know what benevolent means. How do you treat your cats, more like Superman who protects them from danger, or more like the indolent god who sits by watching expecting you to believe that that is somehow loving. You make excuses for a god that is indistinguishable from nonexistence, and instead of noting that it does nothing, you praise that fact, call it benevolence anyway, and object to others thinking otherwise.
Only in your personal opinion, so I would exercise caution when stating it as a fact. Facts are known and provable, personal opinions aren't.
The tri-omni god doesn't exist just as married bachelors don't exist, and for the same reason. If this universe has a god, it is not involved in our lives and can't be called benevolent. There are no indifferent benevolent gods
Your own writing suggests that you understand that, as you try to redefine benevolence to resemble the non-acts of a non-god. And when explained what benevolence actually looks like, you bristle. How dare I think like that, right? That's when I hear about my ego.
Well, I do dare and have since I left religion. The kind of caution you recommend is for those who have been cowed into believing that some angry, vengeful deity is watching them, and who don't trust their own minds to decide when they are being lied to. My advice to you is the opposite - to be more bold.
I don't see the world like you do. My world contains no gods or supernaturalism. The list of do's and don't, and rights and wrongs that follow from that are very different from those that follow from accepting that bit about thinking being hubris as we see here. It's why I can say what a benevolent god might do, and you would shush me.
The deity is involved in our universe or and the deity is fully aware that we exist and the deity has all power to help us. The deity is not indifferent to our needs and desires to prevent suffering. The deity gives us exactly what we need to prevent our own suffering.
No, it's not. The evidence to the contrary falsifies that claim.
You seem to expect as little from this god as I do, but where I call its non-behavior compatible with its nonexistence, you describe it in glowing terms as you just did. Living as if it doesn't exist has made my life better.
You might know that I consider premarital sex essential to deciding compatibility in a relationship if there will be a sexual relationship. You probably don't know that my first marriage had no premarital sex. Our first was after we were married. Big mistake. Huge mistake. And it's not just sex. We were both in the Army and living in barracks, so I knew nothing about what living with her would be like. Another huge mistake. Those rules are irrational and harmful. That marriage didn't last long after we started living together. Fortunately, I gave up thinking by faith and returned to reason. I tried it again - marriage, that is. We did it all before marriage including living together, and the experience was the opposite of the first marriage. We were happy from the start, and still are 32 years later. I didn't buy a pig in a poke that time.