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You lost me there. What?so much so that the definition of 9-11 as "terrorism" is shaky, and possibly an incorrect way of looking at it.
You lost me there. What?so much so that the definition of 9-11 as "terrorism" is shaky, and possibly an incorrect way of looking at it.
Yes it did, if you check the words of the draft, and if you find "defame" and "criticize" to be synomyms, and for that matter, any other than complementary reference and "criticize" to be synonyms.
Wait, that was the target not the source. They view the West as a decadent culture which needs to be destroyed, and attacked what they perceived of as a symbol of decadence.
You lost me there. What?
Well, that makes a little more sense, but I still have to disagree.The WTC attack can also be viewed as a military target, designed to disrupt our economic infrastructure. I'm saying it was more like Pearl Harbor than like the sarin attack in Tokyo, which was more obviously a terrorist action.
I can agree with you to an extent, but it is one of those nuanced things. For instance, the goal of the attacks was most likely propaganda and provocation, two things that are hallmarks of terrorism.Well, that makes a little more sense, but I still have to disagree.
I can't believe they honestly thought they would have made a significant impact on our military capability (unlike the attack on Pearl Harbor made on our Pacific fleet). If they did, they're idiots. Plus, they had no way to significantly follow up on the attack to take military advantage of the chaos. I think the term "terrorist attack" is the only appropriate one.
The targets were the Pentagon, the World Trade Center, and Washington D.C. Two of the three are absolutely targets we'd classify as "military targets", and not specifically attacks on civilians..
The targets were the Pentagon, the World Trade Center, and Washington D.C. Two of the three are absolutely targets we'd classify as "military targets", and not specifically attacks on civilians.
The civilians on the planes?
If they had driven a truck bomb into the pentagon, then you might have had a point. A passenger-plane is not a weapon of war.
Not a commentary on Christianity or the KKK, but it is a commentary on the wackiness of the Venn diagrams of Google Charts.eta: Is that some sort of commentary that the KKK is on the far left of the rest of Christianity?![]()
Damn you, Google! Why do you have to hurt me when I love you so?!?it is a commentary on the wackiness of the Venn diagrams of Google Charts.![]()
And.... cue Pomeroo and the unavoidable Ward Churchill rant...![]()
I agree, but our politics are sometimes unavoidably an extension of our culture. Take the idea of universal human rights for individuals, for example. I'm not saying we hold the copyright to that idea, but if we indeed attempt to follow this ideal, we will inevitably come into conflict with group-based concepts of ethics.That's aimed at our politics, not our culture or our religion.
The Broadway? Nah. Maybe I should have said civilization instead of culture. In any case, I gather you do agree that they attacked a symbol?Decadence was not their only motivation. I'd go so far as to say it wasn't even their primary motivation. If they were looking to attack our culture, they would have aimed at Broadway or maybe Hollywood, not at the WTC, the Pentagon, and the White House.
Well, two problems: I strongly suspect he mentions Israel only because he's well aware that Israel makes for a perfect opportunity to drive a wedge between the political entities representing the West. Of course, I cannot prove this without the ability to look into his mind, thus we'll have to agree to disagree here. The other problem is that I happen to not agree with his assessment of the Israel-Palestine conflict. This is a separate debate where opinions diverge widely, but whichever compromise position we might reach, I don't think bin Laden's demands should be a factor in it."Terrorism against America deserves to be praised because it was a response to injustice, aimed at forcing America to stop its support for Israel, which kills our people"
Ah, but his idea of justice differs widely from our idea of justice.He said that the attacks were carried out because, "We are a free people who do not accept injustice, and we want to regain the freedom of our nation."
[qimg]http://chart.apis.google.com/chart?cht=v&chs=200x100&chd=t:100,1,0,100,100,0&chdl=Christianity|KKK[/qimg]
I made a chart of my own showing how the KKK analogy is overly simplistic and inadequate.
It also looks like a crescent moon, the symbol of Islam.You can't be serious..
that looks like 80% or so....
Yeah... but would it be if they had stolen an empty plane?
Can we just agree that the 9-11 attacks were more complex than "crazy Muslims hate us for our freedoms", which was the point I was trying to make?
I would agree, if it weren't for the problem that the UN resolution seems to use a different definition. According to the text, the Western media has defamed Islam after 9/11. However, in my book it wasn't so much defamation but criticism. Not to mention that Western politicians have since then bent over backwards in their public statements, and excused Islam in advance as much as possible. Even George W. Bush himself!The stupid, it burns.
There is a difference between rightful criticism and defamation.
It definitely says that the depiction of Islam in the Western media after 9/11 was defamatory.Is it this "OMG, UN says we can't speak ill of Islam!!!" bull? No.
I'm "defaming" bigots.
Do you have a problem with that, or are you saying that bigots are somehow NOT people with something wrong with them.