No, because rather as with Bashful's appeal to his own authority earlier this week, it is essentially irrelevant. If we merely want to dictate discussion on the basis you want to go down, it will entirely defeat the point of the forum.
Classic obfuscation tactic. It is entirely relevant, given that proximity to dealing with some of these issues provides a level of understanding of the situation. I am asking about your understanding and proximities to muslim communities and requirement to deal with the issues of radicalisation and extremism. I suspect by your refusal to answer the reality is 'none' in your case. That isn't the same in my case.
Whenever you feel capable of justifying your point rather attempt to go down this irrelevance, get back to me. If not I will leave you to patting yourself on the back.
My comment was based on any number of comments from members of the relevant communities (whether recently in Paris, or in London e.g. in relation to young men and women travelling to Syria to join ISIS) when they became aware that a member of their community, usually a person they knew personally, had become radicalised in this manner. These aren't my comments, but come from the communities themselves.
I fully accept that I may have 'paraphrased' rather than used real quotes, but the meaning is pretty similar. So here are some direct quotes of the type, in this case from the father of one of the schoolgirls from Bethnal Green:
'Mr Abase said that Amira has been behaving in a "normal way" when he last saw her.
He said: "She said 'daddy, I'm in a hurry.
"There was no sign to suspect her at all."
Speaking at Scotland Yard's headquarters, Mr Abase said his daughter had not mentioned Syria or politics to her family.
However he said that he did not know if she had spoken about the topics with friends.
He added: "She doesn't dare discuss something like this with us. She knows what the answer would be."'
Or a remarkably similar comment from a neighbour who grew up with one of the Paris attackers:
'"He was not an angry kid," Sheikh Mohammed told the BBC. "He was not something, someone bad, I don't know what happened. When I saw his picture I was like, 'What? Really? This guy?'"'