It has not been disproven either. Science not being able to quantify or test for God is a valid issue
I strongly disagree. Inability to disprove something that was never proven to exist in the first place is not a valid issue. When you claim that something is real or factual, the onus is on
you to back up your claim. The onus is not on the rest of the world to disprove your claim.
If you believe that the inability to disprove something that has not been proven to exist is a real problem, then please back up that statement.
Quantum mechanics couldn't be proven until very recently. That doesn't mean it simply popped into existed the moment it hit textbooks.
I'm not sure why you would make such an excessively obvious point.
Prior to QM being accepted as fact (1920's), QM was a theory. QM is an explanation for how things work - it is not the very process itself, but a man made description of the process. Since then, the theory was revised.
When an apple falls from a tree, it doesn't flip open a book on physics and look for instructions on how to fall. It moves as a result of the forces acting on it. The book is just our description of what is happening.
I hope you don't think that I'm confused about this or something? o.O
It is fine to say there is not enough evidence for you personally to believe in God, and it is good to question things to see if they really hold up, but whatever standard you use, apply it even to that which you believe to see if it still holds up.
Ok. I am holding pen in my hand. As far as I can tell, it is real. I can touch it, tap it, write with it, taste the ink... Just for shits and giggles, I asked my co-worker a minute ago to verify for me that the pen was real and she did. I asked her to prove to me that it was real, so she threw it at me. It kind of hurt, but make me laugh for whatever that is worth.. I could go around the office and seek further confirmation I suppose, but I have no good reason at the moment to doubt this. If someone gave me a somewhat plausible reason to doubt this, then I suppose I could perform some more tests and seek more people confirm the findings. We could dissect the word "real" and turn this into semantics game, but that would kind of stupid.
It would be MUCH harder for me to prove the Pluto is real since it would require more equipment and knowledge, but it CAN be done, and it does not matter who does it, what their religion is, or what kind of panties they are wearing at the moment. The test of the existence of pluto is also falsifiable. If I carefully point the telescope to where it should be, fuss with it, kick it, or whatever, and there is no pluto, then I get a negative result --- which others will be interested in trying to reproduce or disprove.
We do not make up silly excuses like , "Oh, Pluto decided not to reveal itself to you today because you are Asian." Either the planet is not there, or the test was somehow flawed.
We have by no means unraveled the whole universe. Who knows what scientists will say or be able to prove in the future. For now, science mostly ignores such things in favor of what can be quantified now.
Things that are
accepted as fact are not necessarily final.
Do you know why science ignores things that cannot be proven to exist? It's because these supposed things are of no use to us. We cannot use them, measure them, verify them. Even if they did secretly exist up some hidden orifice outside of space-time, they have no bearing on us. They might as well not exist at all. To pursue such things is unproductive. Now, if it could be proven that a god or ghost or the glorious FSM existed then that would be wonderful and worthy of some time.
Techincally speaking you are doing some of the the same in reverse, so if that kind of response is the problem then it should be a problem no matter who uses it. 
My apologies if I've been abrasive.
Since Religion is such a sensitive topic for you, let's just get back to the original points.
Agree.
I stick out that survival and reproduction can be trumped, in terms of importance, by anything else a person may rank higher in their personal values system.
I agree. I think history would agree too.