You appear to be working on the questionable assumption that if al Qaeda did it then then no-one else (Government and/or Big Business in the United States, Batman and Robin etc) could have been involved. That's what I was referring to as a black and white/ either or stance.
Just as you are continuing to miss the point of my last two posts. Maybe the third time will be the charm, though I don't have high hopes:
...if the Government and/or Big Business in the United Sates is as evil as you say, why wouldn't there be radical groups around the world justifiably angry enough to lash out at America in the form of what we'd call "terrorist" attacks? In other words, wouldn't a 9/11 type event be the sort of thing you'd expect to inevitably happen when downtrodden and angry people revolt against an oppressor?
Sorry to sound like a broken record...actually I'm not
that sorry seeing as you haven't addressed it yet. Let me give you a more concrete example of what I've been trying to convey to you in this thread:
If a schoolyard bully goes around stealing other kid's lunch money for years, would it really be so surprising if a small group of kids got together, decided they had enough, snuck up behind the bully and broke his nose? If the bully showed up in class the next day with his face bandaged and the band of kids were bragging about what they did, would your first thought really be "I bet the bully did that to himself" or even more perversely "I bet he conspired with the band of kids to have that done to him so that he'd have an excuse to bully them even more". Would that
really be your
default opinion? Might that be because
your own small band of kids are too frightened and indecisive about what to do about the bully, so all you do is whisper rude things behind his back and pass notes around when the teacher isn't looking that describe what you'd like to do to the bully? And since that's all
your group has the audacity and ambition to do, you assume that no other group could be more audacious or ambitious?
But getting back to
your point (because that's the mature, polite thing to do when responding to someone's sincere question), I work under the "questionable" assumption that Al Qaeda was soley responsible for the 9/11 attacks for two reasons:
1. Well, partly because of knowing about Occam's Razor, living 43 years on this planet and seeing how the real world operates tells me that more often than not, the simplest solution is the best. Life is not like a James Bond movie (alas). It is not like an Agatha Christie mystery. It is certainly not like, uh "Batman and Robin" (since you mentioned them). To use an example I mentioned elsewhere, when Olympic figure skater Nancy Kerrigan was attacked,
my first thought wasn't "Aha! I bet she orchestrated that herself to get Tonya Harding out of the way!"
oh, I said I have two reasons for assuming that Al Qaeda was solely responsible for 9/11, didn't I? OK, here's the other one.
2. There's no evidence to suggest anyone else
but Al Qaeda was involved in the 9/11 attacks. It's a small point, but an important one, I think.