Yup, I left that bit out because it is completely irrelevant. If I make some nebulous and unjustified demands and then say I somehow have the right to murder innocent people unless those nebulous and unjustified demands are met it makes absolutely zero difference to the appalling and unjustifiable call to murder as many people as possible. And even less when that murderous call was actually carried out.
Thanks for confirming that you can't be trusted to post a quote in its entirety.
I thought it was more honest to link to Sam Harris's full quote on his own website while I quoted the bits I thought were problematic - you know - "the only thing likely to ensure our survival may be a nuclear first strike of our own" and then after contemplating the murder of millions of innocent foreign civilians, Sam Harris suggests that "it may be the only course of action available".
But hey, I guess you and I have different values, thankfully, given you're an apologist for Sam Harris's lunatic ideas about how mass murder against civilians in a pre-emptive nuclear strike may be the only course of action available. Bit too extreme for me.
And by the way the demands are bonkers
Bonkers? Bit like Sam Harris's lunatic ideas about how mass murder against civilians in a pre-emptive nuclear strike may be the only course of action available. Agree with you there.
the holy mosque [in Mecca] was not controlled by the americans let alone all the american's allies (who are the target of Bin Laden's murderous demand of muslims). It is, and was, under the control of the Saudi government so if Bin Laden has beef, then it is with them. Likewise the al-Aqsa Mosque which was and is under the control of a palestinian islamic trust independent from the Israeli government (note that from 2000, prior to the WTC attacks no non-muslims are even allowed to visit the mosque). And, of course, at the point Bin Laden was making these statements there was very little presence of US troops in Muslim countries and the most recent major incursion (if you can call it that) was to support Bosnian muslims. And finally an individual muslim, such as Bin Laden has no right whatsoever to dictate to countries across the globe, regardless of whether they might have muslim majorities, who they should and who they should not have as allies and who they might invite to have military bases on their soil.
Bin Laden's demands were simply a pathetic attempt to justify the unjustifiable - the unprovoked and completely unjustified murder of innocent people.
Do you really think that adding in order to liberate the al-Aqsa Mosque somehow justifies a call to murder innocent people, let alone putting that call into practice by flying planes into the WTC? Do you VG?
I feel sorry that you feel you have to act as such an apologist for a mass murderer. It really is pathetic.
Now you're giving me too many choices - decisions, decisions - do I change my name to Pathetic Gabriella or Beneath Contempt Gabriella as I can't work out which one you're having more fun with. I'll have a think about if it's possible to combine the two without it being too unwieldy - PBCG?
I did not suggest putting in the end of the quote in order to justify flying planes into the WTC. I suggested you put the whole quote in so you don't seem dishonest.
You have not linked to the Bin Laden quotes to establish when they were made - it would be more honest if you did. Just taking your word for stuff on this particular issue hasn't worked out too well thus far, probably due to your prejudices.
As I mentioned in my previous post, which you seem to be having a little trouble comprehending - I'm fairly certain that when people point out instances of unethical US foreign policy, e.g. its habit of funding militants, and its habit of arming dictators in the Muslim World, they are not justifying passenger jets being flown into the WTC.
I think they are just pointing out that an unethical US foreign policy propping up dictators (eg. the Shah in Iran resulting in the Iranian Revolution) or US troop presence in Saudi to defend Saudi during and after the 1991 Gulf War or funding militants or selling arms to dictators could be a pretty dangerous way to run a country as it generates anti-American feelings, which are likely to come back to bite the USA.
For example the US unofficial policy of the CIA helping recruit militants from radical Muslim groups to fight the Soviet Union invasion of Afghanistan, and arming and financially supporting those militants, some of whom went on to carry out terrorist attacks - came back to bite the USA. Bin Laden was one of the militants who went to fight in Afghanistan against the Soviets. So the US seemed fine with militants using violence to fight other countries for what they wanted. That might be a clue as to how Bin Laden the individual had the confidence to make demands of the US or dictate to countries across the globe. Plus Afghanistan is where Bin Laden hung out with the founder of Hamas. And Hamas were opposing Israel in the 1980s and 1990s while Israel carried out a policy of deportations, demolition of homes, collective punishment, curfews and the suppression of political institutions in the Occupied Territories. So you can see how US support for Israel could lead to anti-American feeling, especially after the 1990 "Al Aqsa massacre" when Israeli police fired live ammunition at and killed Palestinian civilians.
You're perfectly entitled to hold an opinion that Israel should remain in occupation of the whole of Jerusalem - but we can observe that occupied people tend to fight back with whatever means are at their disposal including terrorism.
The US firing missiles at Sudan in 1998 and blowing up a pharmaceutical factory that turned out
not to be manufacturing chemical weapons for Al-Qaeda but was supplying medicines for rural communities - would have stirred up a lot of anti-American feeling.
Chris Hitchens had an interesting analysis of this incident.
https://www.salon.com/1998/09/23/news_114/