I disagree with this bald and nonsensical assertion.
However I would like to say one or two things in regard to it.
If viewed as a deflationary statement it has no truth value and is not a statement of truth, and has no reference to objective reality. The deflationary theory however cannot be applied to
all statements, without
meaningful communication breaking down. For two reasons, meaningful statements depend on
meanings being out there
in the world, or up there in the heavens (plato). Meaning also has to do with intersubjectivity, understanding what another person means.
Not viewed as a deflationary statement it
does have a truth value - that it is
false.
Deflationary statements are fine if you want to just chew the breeze, not for philosophy discussions which are about love of wisdom, and truth and ultimate concerns.
I would not report your comment (others may, and I make no judgement about them for doing so). Neither does the statement make me feel worried by it, or insist you change your position or beliefs unless or until it seems good to you to do so.
This sort of statement can claim no more, and can be expressed only
as a tentative opinion is what I think.
And what is more I won't hold you to it. However these are
discussion forums and those who facilitate, and others who use them may disagree, and may change the rules accordingly, so that meaningful discussion may continue.
Going back to your comments about respecting beliefs. Discussions are about truth, not merely beliefs. Does truth on these important questions change? The quoted statement isn't a truth statement. Its either a belief or a sort of protest. Which is more important that people respect your beliefs, or honour truth? If honouring truth means civilly disrespecting your beliefs can you handle that? Can I honour
truth without making 100 posts of "there is a God" on an atheist forum
. I believe so.