No, As I said not all atheists are Goddodging at anyone time, secondly, theists can also Goddodge. That is what the biblical story of Jonah is about.
Obvously it is possible for theists to practise god evasion or 'goddodging' because they actually have some sort of belief in a god. Just as obviously, it does not really make much sense for an atheist who doesn't believe in a god to evade something which they believe doesn't exist. I suggest that someone who does goddodge must have some sort of underlying feeling, at least, that this god exists, such a person as C S Lewis, for instance.
For my own part, I don't believe in any god so the idea of goddodging makes little sense for me. You, on the other hand, are a self confessed Thor dodger, and therefore either you have at the very least a feeling that Thor exists, or you are simply lying.
If an atheist is actively prepared to cleave to an idea that is more "bonkers" than a necessary entity to preserve their atheism then that is goddodging writ large.
If an atheist has "bonkers" ideas, then perhaps their "bonkers" ideas should be challenged. It doesn't follow, however, that believing in a necessary entity is inevitably "bonkers", or that the alternative to a necessary entity is "more bonkers". It is also quite possible to believe in a necessary entity and remain an atheist.
I have heard of an antitheist who says he doesn't believe specifically because he believes a God would inevitably stand in judgment presumably by dint of merely existing.
Two things here. Firstly you are talking about an antitheist, not just an atheist. Secondly, the idea that a god would inevitably stand in judgement simply because it exists, does not allow for the possibility of deism.