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RE: A Quick Ontological Argument for Why God Does Not Exist
First of all, you're using Anselm's version of the argument. If you had done any research, you would have found that better versions have been developed. I think Plantinga's is best. It, by the way, does not assume existence is a property.
What you've done here seems to be taken directly from Dawkins' book.
The problem with it is that the Ontological Argument defines God as a Maximally Great Being. That is, the greatest possible being. A God who creates everything while not existing cannot be a Maximally Great Being, because he isn't a possible being.
(Also, I don't know why you talked about existence as a property, since this has not to do with your counter argument.)