Ask yourself why any follower of Jesus would make these various claims, at a time when the disciples had gone into hiding for fear of the Jewish Authorities, not to mention the Romans. Why would they draw attention to themselves and risk putting their lives in mortal danger by making such claims? It doesn't add up.
That's a reasonable question. I'm not saying it is unanswerable - but if someone is told, with plausible threat, that if they continue to say they witnessed the resurrection, for example, they will be tortured to death, then what would make them stick to their story? It can't be so glibly dismissed as by saying "well they were obviously lying", can it?
What would make men fly planes into buildings, it can't be so glibly dismissed as by saying "well they were obviously lying", can it?
I would suggest that in the case of Jesus' followers, who believed him to be the son of "God", it was loyalty to him that made them suffer and die. It is not unknown for many people in war nowadays to do the same thing; lie or die to protect their comrades.
As for the pilots who committed suicide, it was their belief in Islam and the 'reward' they were going to get.
I would like to know what is wrong with you. Apart from your all but pathological obsession with a thing you don't even believe in, you exhibit absolutely no intellectual credibility by merely denouncing every single aspect of the Bible stories out of hand
The comparison between the followers of Jesus and what they claimed, and the 9/11 murderers is a case in point. In fact, the two bear no resemblance. The 9/11 psychopaths were a well-organised group of radicalised volunteers, who were ready to kill Westerners, because they detest all things Western. They planned their atrocity for months, even years in advance, and were a highly efficient bunch. The followers of Jesus, on the other hand, were largely illiterate, or at best, semi-literate, individuals, who simply attested to what they had seen. There was no group organisation, no planning or collusion, and especially no intent to die for what they were saying: they put themselves in mortal danger because they wanted to witness what they had experienced. I don't suppose any of them sought martyrdom. That is the situation, and for you to make any comparison between the two events, is frankly, ignorant.