My question to you is, which type of atheist are you? How did you come to this belief?
I'm a moderate atheist...
in the sense that, I'll assert that none of the current religions are representative of what is actual... but that rather they're creations of people. I'll qualify that by saying that I have an incredibly slim, but not none, chance of been wrong about that.
I derive that assertion on the idea that, what we do know is next to nothing, but that here we are in a state of existence... so that we know that existence was somehow initiated... apart from that we know no characteristics of the creator; we can only guess at what created us... and thus far, most of our guesses have derived from other facets of logic... mostly characteristics of human construct.
But I won't go so far as to say that there can't be a creator entity... afterall, the creator could be a bastard, creating false memories, evidence, impressions and all that just to 'test' us, and sadly, as illogical as that is from most points of view, it's actually logically self contained, and has a chance of been true, given the nothing we know about the cause of the original creation of the matter and the behaviour that governs that matter in the universe.
But the view I tend to favour from an aetheist standpoint is that, although something has been created, the creator doesn't necessarily have to be anything sentient. Infact, it could be a void that has overtime a chance to create something, anything. It has infinite time to do so, and as such will over the course of that infinitum create every single concievable configuration, including this universe... infinite times no less.
I was once a Christian... and I reinforced my logic with what I thought were compelling arguments... including the ontological one, the argument by intelligent design, and what not... after taking a class in philosophy of religion, those arguments were firmly and utterly shaken...
And coupled with what I learnt in psychology, I came to see, understand that many of the facets of religion, can be related to in a human way... how those things came about to exist, as a function of human behaviour, psychology and what not.
Ultimately, after distancing myself from Christianity for a period, I came to realise that it wasn't for me... it no longer made sense to me, could not supply me with answers to basic questions about why things are the way they are in the world...
Or rather, science, history, psychology, anthropology and logic all work together to provide me with far better answers than religious dogma ever could.