Eh?
I am suggesting that, if read as such, the Noah story gives a very clear narrative answer to the question "why doesn't God just wipe out evil".
That wasn't the question, it was a question of why God doesn't intervene to curve or destroy a specific evil.
I suspect your problem is that you don't want a narrative answer. You want a propositional answer, or at least a narrative that can be translated into a propositional answer as though narrative were second best. I suggest that narrative is, in fact, the better form for addressing such questions, as most human cultures have thought, and that translating them makes about as much sense as trying to turn the instructions for safely running a nuclear power-station into fairy-tale.
My problem is that the bible gives hundreds of "narrative answers" about how God might deal with various evil armies and or people, they just don't answer the question of why this one doesn't make the list.
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