the thesis that i am arguing is that at the very least evidence for the afterlife exists. if your thesis is that the afterlife can't be proven as true, then i am open to healthy skepticism.
as far as i see it, the skeptics on the evidence usually just ignore it. i assume they think the out of body evidence and 'the blind seeing' evidence is simply inaccurate. they have to believe that for the evidence to be untrue, but it looks like the evidence isn't simply inaccurate. this is a case of skeptics simply ignoring evidence.
then there's just the stuff they dont give reasons for. why are people met on the other side almost always dead family members, why is communication almost always telepathic? if this was hallucations neither of those things would be so consistent. this is plain evidence, and skeptics almost never even try to deal with it.
what if the afterlife is as these experiences indicate them to be? how stupid would a person have to be to have it plainly in front of their face, whether you want to call it evidence or not, and still pretend they had no clue as to the truth? people are experiencing elaborate afterlife stories when they die, yet skeptics pretend there's nothing that might indicate an afterlife. at best, it's skepticism for the sake of skepticism. hallucinations are a possible explanation, so they assume that's what it is, despite the philosophy and science that indicates they are mistaken. they are right that their interpretation is possible... but it's not probable, or in any case, it's not like there's nothing that might indicate an afterlife exists.
even if it's not evidence, it's still a plain 'indicator', whatever you want to call it. it has meaning. to have to quibble if something might indicate something v if it's evidence is just stupid. it's right in front of our faces and skeptics just choose to ignore it.