... trying to deny Islam's influence and that some of the texts that many of them use in an authoritative manner outright condone or recommend a follower to do such a thing is just as bad as trying to belittle any other important factor in play. That the Quran doesn't specifically demand Muslims to crash planes as part of a terrorist act is completely irrelevant when a specific method to accomplish goals that it did demand wasn't stated in the first place. I'm fairly sure that Thor 2 is quite willing to admit that Islam was not the sole reason in play, regardless.
I don't think that T2 is willing to admit that. I've seen his references to the 9/11 hijackers too often to think so. They are his #1 argument against not only
Islam but against
religion as well. He doesn't know and doesn't understand what religion
is.
But of course,
"the Quran doesn't specifically demand Muslims to crash planes as part of a terrorist act." I do know both when it was written, and when airplanes were invented. What I wanted T2 and similarly minded people to acknowledge was that no matter what a book contains, you, the reader of the text, are the one who decides what to believe and what to obey. (An authority figure may force you to obey certain scripture, but then
that is the point, not your allegiance to the text.)
This goes even more for self-contradictory religious texts:
You make your choice between the contradictions: What do you believe in? What do you obey? What do you ignore? Are Christians
"people of the book" or
kafirs, for instance?)
Persecution of the
infidels weren't exactly invented by the Muslims and brought to the West by Muslims. And no matter what the Bible says, only a very small minority of Christians today seem to think that it's a good idea.
If we trace this particular discussion back, of course, it looks like it starts with you denying Islam as a factor in play at all and Thor 2 pointing out that your reasoning for denying that Islam could be a factor was... terrible. Which it was. And your rebuttal to that went off in another direction entirely.
It starts l-o-n-g before that, in other threads, actually.

But what do you mean by
"factor"? I would never deny that it is Islam is referred to a lot by the holy warrior. It is! But what some of the atheist extremists misunderstand is the exact role that religion plays. It's not a factor, it's subterfuge. It works much like whatever ideology school shooters (slightly different brands of suicidal mass murderers) invoke as their
cause when they go on a rampage. It glorifies their revenge and their self-loathing.
Are you trying to claim that that is the only factor in play?
Yes. Much the same what that
The Troubles in Northern Ireland wasn't about religion and the uprising of the Catholic Poles against the Sovietunion wasn't about religion. This day and age religion may serve as a rallying cry and a banner, and to ISIS it certainly did, but even to the leaders of the movement that was not what it was about. It was no coincidence that the
leaders of ISIS were recruited from the rather secularized forces of the Iraqi army. What does that tell you?!
ETA: What motivates the leaders and generals of an army is often different from what motivates the suicide squads. The leaders rarely intend to become martyrs.
Take a moment to reread if you don't believe my earlier summation of the start of this. I didn't see anywhere where Thor 2 claimed that, on review. Feel free to point me at something that I missed though, if I did?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=12452527#post12452527