Both you and Tom are only focusing on one part of this argument for some reason...
I'll address Methane's state, but I'm asking you to look at the location and spectrometry of microbial mats in relation to these outgassings of Methane. Do that first, and
then tell me I'm just blowing gas.
(See what I did there?)
Again, bacterial/microbial mats cannot exist without... ??
And if they existed, or are extant, one of their byproducts would have been... ??
For reference:
Uncanny Similarities to Earthen Samples
Now, Methane's states...
Titan's "water" cycle is Methane-based because of a combination of surface pressure and how cold it is. (-290 degrees F) Methane boils at -257. So it's mostly a liquid on Titan, as you referenced.
For those who don't know or who are wondering - yes. Those are oceans on Titan's surface; Oceans of Methane. Titan has seasons, weather, lakes, streams, oceans, tides, rivers, waterfalls, and static sand dunes which sometimes lift themselves
against the direction of the wind!
No one is claiming that Methane is not found in different states, and in different forms, throughout the Solar System. The state, form, amount, release patterns, locations, and timing on Mars, in conjunction with other surface studies mentioned above, are what should be intriguing.
The average temperature on Mars is -67 degrees F. (Into the mid +60s at the equator during the Summer.) So it's impossible for Methane to exist on Mars, in it's natural state, as anything other than a gas. These releases can't possibly come from frozen liquid methane that's evaporating as it warms in the Sun, for example, which
does happen in some places on Titan. Even on the coldest day on Mars' poles, Methane is at least 100 degrees past it's boiling point. The Maritan releases must be trapped subsurface pockets (on Earth known primarily to come from biological decay) released during times when Mars subsurface ice layers are thinned by thaw, or a chemical or geological process unique to Mars' chemistry that we are currently unaware of. And I'm open to that possibility - so long as it can be substantiated and not just posited.
For a direct comparison of what I'm talking about:
The Mystery of Methane on Mars and Titan
I realize this is all "Too-long-didn't-read" for most people. But you've asked for an explanation of my positions, and it's certainly a little more distinct than "showing evidence of water", which, I might add, was also mocked when it was first suggested even though the circumstantial evidence was overwhelming. Today, as evidence has continued to pour in over time, everyone and their mother knows that Mars was once a very wet place, with lots of warmth, water, chemistry, and geology... I don't see those claims as being any different than mine that Mars' had a rich biological history.