@Kinitari, Sutton Dagger:
I am not sure why we would need to throw every neutral position into the "non-believer" camp. Is that some respect points, is that a "win" for that team? Because honestly, If I have a scale of "Sure Belief" and "No belief at all", it seems obvious that there is a middle position, a border.
And since it can easily be described (you both did it for me: " I am not sure a God exists, I am not sure any God exists, I am not sure that no God exists, I am not sure that no Gods exists"), why would it be automatically labeled as disbelief? That is not logical.
Especially in binary logic, that deals with clearly true or false statements, whether you are sure/unsure - and therefore, considering your viewpoint, it is a subjective territory -, then the statement
"I do believe in a God" is either TRUE or FALSE.
The "I do not know" option that is clearly a valid position renders the question incompatible with binary logic, the same way saying "In a cloudy village in Italia, this morning a penny was found behind a staircase" is incompatible if you have no way of knowing whether the answer is true or not.
But since we are human beings, and can operate outside the binary logic, we can conclude that an unsure position is just that: an unsure position. Not a disbeliever position, and not a believer position.
And besides, still using logic, if saying "I am not sure I believe" puts you in the non-belief camp, by simple negation, the "I am not sure that I DO NOT believe" will HAVE TO put you in the belief camp.
I bolded this part not because of shouting, but because it is quite conclusive, imho