Helpful - always useful to hear from the person themselves rather than via other people's interpretations. And of course this is from 2015 while the original piece (which he clarifies its meaning) was from years before that.
So he is specifically asked whether he 'want to do a nuclear first strike on the muslim world? Is that true Sam?'
His answer - 'No'.
Not buying it. When it comes to Vlad and other posters you and many others are all over their words - their posts, interpreting their written word, demanding posters withdraw their statement or apologise or holding people accountable for the words they have used, sometimes in an exceptionally pedantic manner.
But when it comes to Sam Harris's written words your approach changes and you seem to ignore the glaring gaps in the question and answer in the interview. Any particular reason for the different approach to Sam's words?
Any thoughts on why the interviewer did not quote Sam the words in his own blog where he addresses the controversy about his comments and quotes from his book, He could have quoted Sam's exact words "What will we do if an Islamist regime, which grows dewy-eyed at the mere mention of paradise, ever acquires long-range nuclear weaponry? In such a situation,
the only thing likely to ensure our survival may be a nuclear first strike of our own. Needless to say, this would be an unthinkable crime—as it would kill tens of millions of innocent civilians in a single day—but
it may be the only course of action available to us, given what Islamists believe.So that rather ends the debate about whether Harris wants to make a nuclear first strike on the muslim world, or even an islamist regime as there is no evidence that he wants to do this whatsoever, nor that he thinks this would be a good thing. Indeed even in the article he describes this as an unthinkable crime. What person in their right mind would interpret someone as wanting to do something that they consider to be an unthinkable crime.
Well, you're right the debate was ended a while back when evidence of what Sam Harris actually wrote emerged and was linked to and quoted.
You can't quote what you label as 'genocidal' passages in the Bible, and not take the same approach to Sam's written word. If Sam had said I repudiate the line where I wrote "but it [
nuclear first strike of our own against tens of millions of innocent people] may be the only course of action available to us, given what Islamists believe." then we would be having a different discussion. Sam's brand of atheism is very dangerous if he is reaching for the nuclear first strike option because of his 'othering' of those with religious beliefs who are battling US hegemony.
It's not surprising that he feels this way, as many Westerners have been inculcated with a fear of the 'other' and the idea that Western lives are more valuable than other people's lives. Once again I would refer him to
https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/blog/reformed-racists-white-supremacists-life-after-hate/What he is saying, and explains pretty well in the video, is that the notion of martyrdom is a game changer as it completely negates the whole rationale of nuclear deterrents - the notion that mutually assured destruction means that neither side will push the trigger as neither side wants to die. If one side doesn't care whether they live or die, or even think that dying would be glorious and martyrdom, then the whole notion of mutually assured destruction not longer has any currency.
And we've actually already seen this, with regard to terrorist acts. In the past our whole approach to preventing terrorism was based on the notion that the terrorist would do everything they could to avoid being killed while trying to kill others. So we focussed preventative efforts on looking for parcels sent to others, cars left unattended, packages left in bins. On planes we assured that no luggage could be on a plane taking off if the owner of that luggage wasn't on the plane. We assumed that if a plane was highjacked that the approach was to wait until it landed and then deal with the situation then. All of this was based on the notion that the bomber would try to avoid being killed by their own bomb.
All that went out of the window when the notion of the suicide bomber started to appear, largely from the late 1990s and certainly from 2001. All our certainties that a terrorist wouldn't blow up a plane they were on, or a car they were travelling in at the time etc etc went out of the window.
Harris and Bin Laden have a lot in common. Similar to Harris' reasoning, it made sense to Bin Laden that if you are up against superior fire power like that of the US and its allies which you cannot hope to beat through conventional methods, and if they are an existential threat to you, you need to act decisively to take the fight back to them on their soil. He reasoned that the US had murdered far more civilians in its history of power-grabbing than he, Bin Laden, would kill by sending a couple of passenger jets into the Twin Towers, but the visual spectacle would have an impact on the resolve of the US to continue it's current foreign policy and would boost the morale of Islamist fighters. As it happens, Bin Laden killed more people than he anticipated as the towers completely collapsed so the death toll of 9/11 was in the range of about 3000 people.
Sam Harris on the other hand is fairly confident in his anticipation that a nuclear first-strike would kill millions, and despite this, that
it may be the only course of action availableI guess Harris is extrapolating this to nuclear deterrents which isn't an unreasonable thing to do. I'm not sure his notion is really credible though as I thinks he assumes that within an islamist regime all people, including the leaders, their families etc desire martyrdom. I'm not sure this is the case - my reflection on these regimes is that they tend to encourage those way down the pecking order to engage in suicidal activities, but don't really do this themselves as leaders. So, while they might fight to the end, there does seem to be heavy dollop of good old fashioned self preservation amongst the leadership, even if the expect the rank and file to be prepared to martyr themselves.
Would agree with you there about Sam's notion not being credible. Sam Harris sounds like a fruit loop. Sam Harris sounds like Bin Laden.
And while there might be a focus on islamist ideologies now the notion of suicide and martyrdom isn't uniquely islamist. The most obvious comparator being the kamikaze pilots in WW2, but there is also a fairly long tradition across a number of religions of suicide cults, albeit in many case those only involve the suicide of the individual or members of that group, rather than using suicide as a mechanism to murder other people.
Yes, presumably Sam did not pay attention when US marines were being trained long before the 1990s to sacrifice their lives to kill those deemed the enemy of the US.
He did not consider the US mass shootings in schools or other civilian places followed by the suicide of the gunman - either by the gunman's own hand or shot down by police - as a game changer that required a first strike? That wasn't a game changer for him? He did not think we don't know where these mass shooters might be or where they will come from so lets shoot everyone just in case? He just has a problem with Muslims killing Americans on US soil?
As there is a fairly long tradition in the US of mass murderers who commit suicide without the involvement of religion and cults as well, perhaps a more rational approach would be to study the common factors that drive people to mass murder - suicide.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/wicked-deeds/201802/the-shocking-and-unexplored-mass-shooting-suicide-connection