Are you making a moral judgement when you suggest asking questions, “suggests a lack of moral integrity.”? T|he topic question is, “IS EVIL ONLY A PROBLEM FOR THEISTS?” Does this suggest a lack of moral integrity to you! If yes, as you seem to be saying, what do you base this on?
As I already explained, it's based on an axiom, the axiom that value can only be derived from choice.
An implication is that you need God to motivate moral acts, in which case the acts' value falls with the loss of choice. Let me be more explicit: Value is derived from choice, and in the absence of choice, no value can exist.
This is value specifically as it applies to morality, which, again, rests on axiomatic premises. So yes, I was making a moral judgement, and I presented my reasoning very clearly.
You finally said, “Yes, there is evil in the world, and it is a problem.” For non theists? Is it a problem for your world view and how?
This implies that evil is a dependent issue, meaning that it's dependent upon perception, which in turn implies that there is no such thing as absolute evil. I suppose you could consider this to be a tenet of moral relativism, but I'm digressing a bit.
In short, I find it very odd that you'd ask the question. Obviously, having just employed axioms, I think that evil is absolute, in which case there is no contingency.