Upon what do you base this opinion? No, ancient greek myths were inspired heavily by Egyptian culture and mythology. It is not a mainstream opinion that Greeks were influenced by Canaanites and I've never heard anyone argue such. There are arguments that phoenician religion had impact on Greek mythology, but its really only Phoenician-boos that argue such.
If we're talking about pre-Bronze Age Collapse then most of the Greek myths weren't even around for another half dozen centuries so it still doesn't hold.
Actually they are usually athiests looking to take down christianity by proving Judaism is "made up." Sure it happens all the time but there is a huge industry which peddles in memes and psuedo-archeology that "proves" this and I'm not aware of many, if any, other cases of such a fake industry existing. I noticed you didn't acknowledge that I said athiests (or anti-semites.)
Um, what?
While there was trade between Ancient Egypt and
Mycenaean Greece, as there were with all cultures at that time pre-Collapse (they found tin from
Cornwall, for example, in Ancient Egypt), many of the concepts and parallels of later Classical Greek mythos' back histories (specifically the times
before the Titans) rhyme consistently with Canaanite religious concepts (which include Phoenician or the peoples who would eventually become the distinct Phoenicians from other Canaanite tribes).
IIRC Ancient Egyptian culture and religious concepts didn't directly influence the pre-Mycenaean Greeks? Or am I missing something discovered in the last few years?
Anyway, to be poetic? While it could be argued that it's all coincidence, looking at the forest instead of the trees show that the trees have similar patterns.
I actually found a Reddit post that sums it up more articulately that I could:
Also, incidentally, after the Bronze Age Collapse, the Phoenician alphabet was adopted by the post-Mycenaean Greeks. It completely replaced Linear A, which vanished during the Greek Dark Ages.
Again, while those people who have agendas to "disprove" Christianity or Judaism exist, not everyone, atheist or not, have those agendas when discussing the possible origins of Judaism.
However, the moment a discussion on whether Judaism
could've basically evolved from a Canaanite religion or cult is brought up, it's automatically
presumed that the person doing so is attacking the religion in some way instead of their just trying to have a discussion, and the "you're just trying to be anti-semitic" card is immediately thrown down to the point where it's becoming a buzzword of a sort. smh