Didn't bother reading your entire post.
May not bother reading another one of your post until you can prove beyond a doubt that your premise "that the Bible is false" is base on truth.
....where do you want me to start? I mean, it's wrong on just about every testable claim it makes. In terms of being wrong as a record of history, everyone in the book's version of history from Adam until David (whether or not that includes David is still debated right now) is fictional. None of the stuff that is reported in Genesis, like the creation myth or the flood myth, is anything more than a fancy morality tale, and most of them have questionable moral conclusions (such as don't work together, always listen to the voices in your head even if they tell you to let your neighbors drown or murder your kid, or don't try to get more knowledge).
In terms of science, again, it's wrong on almost everything it says. Almost all of it talks about a firmament: that is to say, the authors believed that the upper level of the universe (what they saw when they looked into the sky) was full of water that had been separated from the water on earth, and that they were living on some land floating between the two waters, the water above and the water below. The texts are also geocentric. They also provide no new scientific information that could improve human quality of life, like that germs cause disease, instead perpetuating the ideas people already held, such as that sin or demons cause disease. They don't describe how to effectively treat disease, instead relying on telling you to banish someone from civilization because of their leprosy or unusual discharge or whatever and hope they got better, when antibiotics would have been relatively easy to explain, as in ancient Egypt they did have a form of antibiotic mold they were using to treat wounds.
In terms of testable moral claims, it's a very bad source for morality; it's ok with slavery, even telling you the worth of a slave, the value of a slave's life in comparison to a free person (eg, if your ox gores another man's slave, you're not executed like you would be if it gored a free man, you're just fined, and if you beat your slave and he dies as a result, you're not punished), and it flat-out states that all female slaves are sex slaves (Exodus 21:7-11). In terms of its ideas of family values, even Jesus promotes hating and abandoning your family, and that's not event he worst ones, in Exodus you have passages telling you that if your family member becomes an infidel, you need to personally murder them, and if your kid doesn't do what you say, you need to publicly execute him.
It condemns people based on factors they have no control over. Married or engaged victims of rape are executed for losing their virginity, even if they had no control over the situation, and unmarried ones are either executed for forced to marry their rapist. In John 9:2, it is assumed that a man who was BORN blind either sinned or his parents sinned to cause his condition. In books like Deuteronomy, Judges, and 1st Samuel, people--including infants--are put to death for having been born the wrong gender or in the wrong city. There's also a story about one of the kings (I think it was Saul or David), after a city surrendered to him, taking the men of the city and making them stand in a line, then measuring with a cord, and every two cord lengths, the guys were sold as slaves, but the third length was killed. God also killed a ton of people based on the actions of their rulers, with no concern over whether the people were themselves guilty or innocent.
In terms its value for theological truth, it's self-evident that nothing in the book is self-evident, because you end up needing to interpret it through your own ideas of how the universe works. That's why there are so many different sects today--everyone has their own idea of what the text means, but none of those ideas agrees with the others, so either the other 99% of people who are not in your sect can't read or else the text is just too ambiguous, vague, and self-contradictory.